ErikSS wrote:That sucks man. I hope you have a warm place to do it!
bartonmd wrote:ErikSS wrote:That sucks man. I hope you have a warm place to do it!
Nope, not this... I would do the TB in the garage, but this is entirely too long for the garage, at least with the door shut. I do have a carport on the east side of the house that's out of the wind, though, and its supposed to be like 38 on Sunday, so I may do that. If my buddy happens to be down at his dads house, I could probably use the barn, but its not any warmer than outside, really...
Though, what I'll likely end up doing is pulling the front end into my shop and lowering the door on top of the cab, then putting some cardboard around each side of it, and turning on the heat. If it was going to be really cold, or if it was a really big job, I could drive an hour south and do it in my grandparents' insulated concrete floor pole barn, but it shouldn't be either of those things, with any luck.
Mike
bartonmd wrote:I'm starting to wonder if I've got a damaged PCM... The only other thing I can think of is a cam position sensor...
Mike
bartonmd wrote:Yep, cruise works.
Mike
KE7WOX wrote:I think that a bad wire would make the same but intermittent, or the same all the time. But that's not really my area of expertise.
I ran out of ideas, other than maybe see if this continues once it warms up a little bit (Atmospherically) and see if it's temperature related.
On a sidenote, how are those Duratracs working for you in the snow?
KE7WOX wrote:Ok so it's not a temperature thing then.
On the wires I was thinking more along the lines of a frayed wire that was making intermittent contact, or that it was getting "open" on vibration or something like that. That's just experience with my ABS that had a bad wire going from the right front speed sensor; and the ABS would sometimes intermittently fail, or be disabled and intermittently work.
I'm seriously considering Duratracs to replace my SilentArmors, at least for the winter/spring, because the SA's aren't that great when Dublin half-asses the road plowing.
JamesDowning wrote:Mike, I assume your clutch has a switch that returns a signal to the ECU. Sounds to me like your ECU isn't getting the signal that you're disengaging the engine from the drivetrain. If you're coasting to a stop while using engine braking, the ECU might be demanding an idle speed of around 300 to give you engine braking... but when you push in the clutch, it should understand that there's no longer the momentum of the vehicle keeping the engine revved, and reset the idle to the higher setting. I'd see if the clutch signal is making it to the ECU.