Timbo
SyTy Stalker
It's been a year and 4 months since my Ty died. I'm going to be working on it today, and I want to at least find the problem, if not fix it. Here's what happened when it died...
I was driving on the Alcan at about 50-55mph (running 92 octane gas, and not using boost at all), I smelled a slight burning scent, and the truck sputtered and died. The burning smell went away almost instantly. When I turned the key, the truck would crank, but wouldn't start. I opened the hood and didn't see anything obviously wrong. I replaced the cap and rotor, still no start. I noticed that my fuel pressure had dropped, but only by a few PSI. I had the truck towed back to Tok (nearest town, 50 miles west), and borrowed a new coil from a shop. Still no start. It was -10° Fahrenheit out and windy, and I didn't want to try and pull a plug out to check for spark. I had my roommate crank the truck and I put my hand on an injector to see if I could feel it pulsing. I didn't feel anything (likely because it was so cold out and getting colder), so I pulled the computer out and replaced the injector drivers. Still no start. At this point it was -20° with 80mph wind, and working on the truck outside was impossible. The hood had already blown shut on my hand. I had the truck towed back to my parents' house and left it.
Since I've been back here, I've done the following:
Checked ECM A and ECM B fuses, both good.
Replaced the MSD 6AL with a 7AL-2, still no start.
Pulled ignition module and had it tested - it passed all the tests.
Now what? Here's what I'm going to look at today:
Check for spark.
Check to see if the distributor is rotating at all.
Check the power wire to the ECM.
What other ideas do you guys have?
I was driving on the Alcan at about 50-55mph (running 92 octane gas, and not using boost at all), I smelled a slight burning scent, and the truck sputtered and died. The burning smell went away almost instantly. When I turned the key, the truck would crank, but wouldn't start. I opened the hood and didn't see anything obviously wrong. I replaced the cap and rotor, still no start. I noticed that my fuel pressure had dropped, but only by a few PSI. I had the truck towed back to Tok (nearest town, 50 miles west), and borrowed a new coil from a shop. Still no start. It was -10° Fahrenheit out and windy, and I didn't want to try and pull a plug out to check for spark. I had my roommate crank the truck and I put my hand on an injector to see if I could feel it pulsing. I didn't feel anything (likely because it was so cold out and getting colder), so I pulled the computer out and replaced the injector drivers. Still no start. At this point it was -20° with 80mph wind, and working on the truck outside was impossible. The hood had already blown shut on my hand. I had the truck towed back to my parents' house and left it.
Since I've been back here, I've done the following:
Checked ECM A and ECM B fuses, both good.
Replaced the MSD 6AL with a 7AL-2, still no start.
Pulled ignition module and had it tested - it passed all the tests.
Now what? Here's what I'm going to look at today:
Check for spark.
Check to see if the distributor is rotating at all.
Check the power wire to the ECM.
What other ideas do you guys have?