1997 Dodge Ram 1500 4wd 5.9L hard to start in the morning........
#11
How many miles on your plugs? Have you checked your plenum yet? (see the stickied thread at the top of this forum for loads of info about that, including how to check it.)
The blue puff at first startup is probably from oil getting past the valve seals when the engine sits after driving. (so, you notice it in the morning, or, after the truck has sat for a buncha hours.) Fairly normal for an older truck. (or car...) Valve seals are easy to change, just time consuming. (there's 16 of em.....)
The 'choke' on your truck is controlled by the engine coolant temp sensor. Depending on the year of the truck, there is either one, or two.... the one the PCM pays attention to is the important one. (if you have two, the other one is just for the gauge in the dash. One right from the department of redundancy department.) If the important one is lying...... it gives you funny behavior. If it is telling the PCM that it is REALLY cold out.... the PCM will DUMP gas into the cylinders trying to get a mixture that will burn.... stepping the pedal to the floor while cranking puts the PCM into "clear flood" mode, and it dramatically cuts back on the gas being added.....
For another experiment, when you first go out to start the truck in the morning, stomp the pedal all the way to the floor right away, and crank the engine. See if it fires right up.
The blue puff at first startup is probably from oil getting past the valve seals when the engine sits after driving. (so, you notice it in the morning, or, after the truck has sat for a buncha hours.) Fairly normal for an older truck. (or car...) Valve seals are easy to change, just time consuming. (there's 16 of em.....)
The 'choke' on your truck is controlled by the engine coolant temp sensor. Depending on the year of the truck, there is either one, or two.... the one the PCM pays attention to is the important one. (if you have two, the other one is just for the gauge in the dash. One right from the department of redundancy department.) If the important one is lying...... it gives you funny behavior. If it is telling the PCM that it is REALLY cold out.... the PCM will DUMP gas into the cylinders trying to get a mixture that will burn.... stepping the pedal to the floor while cranking puts the PCM into "clear flood" mode, and it dramatically cuts back on the gas being added.....
For another experiment, when you first go out to start the truck in the morning, stomp the pedal all the way to the floor right away, and crank the engine. See if it fires right up.
#12
the plugs may have a few thousand miles on them. the blue smoke is a new condition, as it never puffed blue smoke when starting.
as for putting my foot to the floor, i do that now, and it is usually how it starts. still takes it awhile, and it does sorta act like it will catch, then not, then finally ill say "cmon b!tch start" and it starts........
am i giving you any help???? im tryin to be specific as possible.
as for putting my foot to the floor, i do that now, and it is usually how it starts. still takes it awhile, and it does sorta act like it will catch, then not, then finally ill say "cmon b!tch start" and it starts........
am i giving you any help???? im tryin to be specific as possible.
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