kenfish said:Whiskey I See That Use Own A 4speed Auto Which Isn't Having Crank Sensor
Issues. Thank For Reply Anyway Ken
flyairam said:Tex,
My '06 will start immediately if it's done right. I've noticed that if I insert the key and crank right away it will take longer.
Try this: insert the key, turn it to "on", let the lift pump pressurize the lines, the key get recognized by the ECM, then crank. It'll start immediately (I promise).
flyairam said:Tex,
My '06 will start immediately if it's done right. I've noticed that if I insert the key and crank right away it will take longer.
Try this: insert the key, turn it to "on", let the lift pump pressurize the lines, the key get recognized by the ECM, then crank. It'll start immediately (I promise).
BHartman said:I was in a Dodge dealer this week and they came out with a flash for the automatics but are working on one for the Manuals and ETA is possibly December. This should not only help with the starting but should increase mileage some what. This according to this dealer.
TowPro said:But don't the fuel lift pump wait until you turn the key to "crank" before it starts pumping? just like it did on the 2gen?
TEX_03 said:I am curious to know if what I am experencing to normal for my 2006. After a rest period 1-3 hours, till overnight, it is a 50-50 chance that it will take over 3 seconds of cranking the starter to get the beast running.
Temperature do not seem to be a factor, though I have only had the truck 2 months. It has not been in temperatures below 55 deg's.
I know my 03 took longer than my 2000, but this seems just way to long. And I do not want to be that person in the parking lot with people saying "shouldn't have bought the Dodge".
Thanks for the input,
Tex
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2006 Quad Cab 3500 Laramie, 4x4, 6-speed, white, chrome step bars, chrome bed rails