2003 H.O, 5.9, 3500 Dually, 6spd Manual
On a recent trip towing my 8000 pound RV, I lost considerable power on an uphill section (narrow, 2 lane road) to where I only topped the hill in 1st gear (6spd manual) at 2900rpm w/ the pedal to the floor. VERY scary since there was a cliff on one side, and a 1000ft drop-off on the other on the very narrow rural mountainous Utah road. This was at 6500ft and maybe 100degF.
I attacked the hill at about 50 in 5th gear at about 2100rpm as usual, but ended up working down through the gears as the rpm sagged in each one until I was in 1st. Obviously if I couldn't have maintained rpm in 1st, I was out-of-gears and options.
The day before I was climbing similar hills (6% slope) at higher elevations (8500-10,000ft at 80degF) in 4th gear at light throttle setting-no problems and plenty of surplus power.
NO codes are set, and the truck starts, idles, and runs perfectly smoothly.
We just today plugged the Snap-On DRB Scanner into the truck, and found that regardless of throttle position beyond about 1/2 throttle, the MOST fuel pressure commanded was 18,000psi rather than the 23,000psi the tech said we should have seen at WOT. Actual Rail pressure followed commanded perfectly, so the problem is not downstream leakage, but that the system is failing to command max pressure at wide-open-throttle.
At sea level the truck "feels" almost normal except that advancing the throttle past approx 50% has zero effect on power created. It just kind of "boggs."
I replaced filters in the AirDog pump system in case we had a input fuel restriction, with no change.
We then unplugged the connector to the Fuel Control Actuator (FCA) on the injection pump, the tech saying that this should drive the system to MAX fuel pressure of 23,000psi + regardless of the actual throttle pedal position or engine rpm.
Commanded fuel pressure only went to 19,000psi, and rail pressure also went to 19,000psi. This was w/ the engine idling. The rpm didn't change, but the engine sounded more like a 2nd gen 5.9 engine (loud clatter) with the higher fuel pressure applied.
He recommended replacing the FCA and TPS (throttle position sensor), and if that didn't work, we were likely looking at anew ECU (master computer) unit.
Anyone offer any other ideas?
The rail pressure DOES rise to exactly match the "Commanded" fuel pressure, so I would think so far, we can't suspect the injection pump. It is making all the pressure asked of it
Does anything else affect the COMMANDED fuel pressure?
Until I know I can develop full power, I am reluctant to take my modest 8000 pound trailer into the mountains again. Only being able to crest hills at jogging speed in 1st gear is not a comfortable thing to do when there's no place to stop, or a way to back down to a safe place!
Thanks,
Bob
On a recent trip towing my 8000 pound RV, I lost considerable power on an uphill section (narrow, 2 lane road) to where I only topped the hill in 1st gear (6spd manual) at 2900rpm w/ the pedal to the floor. VERY scary since there was a cliff on one side, and a 1000ft drop-off on the other on the very narrow rural mountainous Utah road. This was at 6500ft and maybe 100degF.
I attacked the hill at about 50 in 5th gear at about 2100rpm as usual, but ended up working down through the gears as the rpm sagged in each one until I was in 1st. Obviously if I couldn't have maintained rpm in 1st, I was out-of-gears and options.
The day before I was climbing similar hills (6% slope) at higher elevations (8500-10,000ft at 80degF) in 4th gear at light throttle setting-no problems and plenty of surplus power.
NO codes are set, and the truck starts, idles, and runs perfectly smoothly.
We just today plugged the Snap-On DRB Scanner into the truck, and found that regardless of throttle position beyond about 1/2 throttle, the MOST fuel pressure commanded was 18,000psi rather than the 23,000psi the tech said we should have seen at WOT. Actual Rail pressure followed commanded perfectly, so the problem is not downstream leakage, but that the system is failing to command max pressure at wide-open-throttle.
At sea level the truck "feels" almost normal except that advancing the throttle past approx 50% has zero effect on power created. It just kind of "boggs."
I replaced filters in the AirDog pump system in case we had a input fuel restriction, with no change.
We then unplugged the connector to the Fuel Control Actuator (FCA) on the injection pump, the tech saying that this should drive the system to MAX fuel pressure of 23,000psi + regardless of the actual throttle pedal position or engine rpm.
Commanded fuel pressure only went to 19,000psi, and rail pressure also went to 19,000psi. This was w/ the engine idling. The rpm didn't change, but the engine sounded more like a 2nd gen 5.9 engine (loud clatter) with the higher fuel pressure applied.
He recommended replacing the FCA and TPS (throttle position sensor), and if that didn't work, we were likely looking at anew ECU (master computer) unit.
Anyone offer any other ideas?
The rail pressure DOES rise to exactly match the "Commanded" fuel pressure, so I would think so far, we can't suspect the injection pump. It is making all the pressure asked of it
Does anything else affect the COMMANDED fuel pressure?
Until I know I can develop full power, I am reluctant to take my modest 8000 pound trailer into the mountains again. Only being able to crest hills at jogging speed in 1st gear is not a comfortable thing to do when there's no place to stop, or a way to back down to a safe place!
Thanks,
Bob