I've been fighting a surge issue for about 5 months now and i've searched the forum and followed all I can find. I'll lay out how it began and where I am now as simply as possible.
I have a basically stock 2004 3500 w/6 spd and ~ 75,000 mi
My problems began when an injector failed on a road trip. I experienced the typical misfiring and lots of white smoke when the misfire occurred. I found if I babied the throttle I could minimize the misfire and limped home.
At this point I decided to just replace the injectors with a well known vendors 50 HP units for a bit more power. Following sag2‘s post with the factory install procedures in went the new injectors and all seemed fine. The truck was back to idling very smooth, starts easy and had good power. I set off on another road trip and about 20 mi out of town when things settled out on the highway (~78mph ~2100 rpm) there was a very noticeable surge/bucking feel to the truck. At first I thought the cruise was acting up but it did it w/manual throttle as well. At my first fuel stop on the trip I also noticed the mpg had dropped to 11 mpg which was about a 30% drop from the norm on the same route I have taken many times before. I had never experienced the surge with the stock injectors. When I got back home I called the vendor and they felt I had a fuel leak and I needed to re-torque the connector tubes. Fair enough and sounded plausible. I tore the truck partially down and re-torqued the connector tubes. The vendor asked for me to re-do the complete procedure (loosen everything including injectors, basically start over but with a few minor install instructions he had me follow). I did this and the same surge remained. At this point I hooked the truck up on a Snap On Verus scanner and went for a test drive. When the surge happens it is most noticeable on the highway at 75+mph and ~2100rpm with light throttle. On the Verus I noted a rail pressure oscillation of 1500-1700psi peak to peak that coincided with the surge. With the surge going on I get the following data from the Verus:
APPS Voltage steady (virtually no variation)
APPS % steady (virtually no variation)
Fuel PRS (PSI) 1500-1700 psi peak to peak fluctuation & coincides with surge
Fuel Press (V) fluctuates & coincides with rail pressure and surge
Fuel Set (PSI) steady (virtually no variation) (~15K PSI asked for pressure)
Fuel PRS Reg (%) steady (virtually no variation)
At this point it looked to me like the ECM was asking for a steady pressure and I was getting approximately the asked for pressure but a fluctuation in actual pressure. I now pull the injectors and send them in for test to the vendor. Injectors come back good, I was told they test fine and hold full pressure. Inspected connector tubes and visually look okay, same with the injector ports where the connector tubes interface with the injector. In go the injectors again. Install connector tubes and torqued to a bit extra to 40 ft lbs. Test drive and still have surge. Vendor says maybe its not leaking and no hard start issues common with connector tube leaks. Maybe something else is causing the pressure variations. Install new FCA, APPS looked great on the scanner so didn’t replace that, new rail with pressure sensor and PRV. Surge still exists. Vendor wonders if I have a CP3 problem. At this point I have a bit of frustration. I feel I’m headed down the wrong path so I search TDR again. Following sag2’s posts and great pictures I buy the Miller SPX fuel test tools. I install the 9012 and get separate lines set up to measure fuel returns. CP3 return is right on spec. At idle I have virtually no return fuel from the head but with the FCA disconnected and 1200 rpm I have a huge return/leak at ~850-900mL a minute. I use the 9011 cap and find every injector is contributing to the leak. What the heck? Talk it over with the vendor and we are puzzled (the vendor has been helpful through this) so I/we decide on new connector tubes. I get the new larger 6. 7 tubes that supersede the 5. 9 tubes. In go the new tubes and no joy, the leak rate is exactly the same. Vendor is now sending me a spare set of injectors to test.
My question is has anybody had this type of trouble? Injector/connector tube installation isn’t rocket science people do it everyday with little trouble. I’ve tested all the tube nuts in the head without the tubes and they thread fully into the head with no trouble. When installing the tubes and the nut just snugged up by hand I can twist the injector and feel the tubes wiggle side to side so they are seating into the injector. Can an injector leak under high pressure in the truck where they won’t on the test stand? I guess I’ll find out if the injectors are the culprit when I get the test units installed after they arrive next week. Any comments would be greatly appreciated.
I have a basically stock 2004 3500 w/6 spd and ~ 75,000 mi
My problems began when an injector failed on a road trip. I experienced the typical misfiring and lots of white smoke when the misfire occurred. I found if I babied the throttle I could minimize the misfire and limped home.
At this point I decided to just replace the injectors with a well known vendors 50 HP units for a bit more power. Following sag2‘s post with the factory install procedures in went the new injectors and all seemed fine. The truck was back to idling very smooth, starts easy and had good power. I set off on another road trip and about 20 mi out of town when things settled out on the highway (~78mph ~2100 rpm) there was a very noticeable surge/bucking feel to the truck. At first I thought the cruise was acting up but it did it w/manual throttle as well. At my first fuel stop on the trip I also noticed the mpg had dropped to 11 mpg which was about a 30% drop from the norm on the same route I have taken many times before. I had never experienced the surge with the stock injectors. When I got back home I called the vendor and they felt I had a fuel leak and I needed to re-torque the connector tubes. Fair enough and sounded plausible. I tore the truck partially down and re-torqued the connector tubes. The vendor asked for me to re-do the complete procedure (loosen everything including injectors, basically start over but with a few minor install instructions he had me follow). I did this and the same surge remained. At this point I hooked the truck up on a Snap On Verus scanner and went for a test drive. When the surge happens it is most noticeable on the highway at 75+mph and ~2100rpm with light throttle. On the Verus I noted a rail pressure oscillation of 1500-1700psi peak to peak that coincided with the surge. With the surge going on I get the following data from the Verus:
APPS Voltage steady (virtually no variation)
APPS % steady (virtually no variation)
Fuel PRS (PSI) 1500-1700 psi peak to peak fluctuation & coincides with surge
Fuel Press (V) fluctuates & coincides with rail pressure and surge
Fuel Set (PSI) steady (virtually no variation) (~15K PSI asked for pressure)
Fuel PRS Reg (%) steady (virtually no variation)
At this point it looked to me like the ECM was asking for a steady pressure and I was getting approximately the asked for pressure but a fluctuation in actual pressure. I now pull the injectors and send them in for test to the vendor. Injectors come back good, I was told they test fine and hold full pressure. Inspected connector tubes and visually look okay, same with the injector ports where the connector tubes interface with the injector. In go the injectors again. Install connector tubes and torqued to a bit extra to 40 ft lbs. Test drive and still have surge. Vendor says maybe its not leaking and no hard start issues common with connector tube leaks. Maybe something else is causing the pressure variations. Install new FCA, APPS looked great on the scanner so didn’t replace that, new rail with pressure sensor and PRV. Surge still exists. Vendor wonders if I have a CP3 problem. At this point I have a bit of frustration. I feel I’m headed down the wrong path so I search TDR again. Following sag2’s posts and great pictures I buy the Miller SPX fuel test tools. I install the 9012 and get separate lines set up to measure fuel returns. CP3 return is right on spec. At idle I have virtually no return fuel from the head but with the FCA disconnected and 1200 rpm I have a huge return/leak at ~850-900mL a minute. I use the 9011 cap and find every injector is contributing to the leak. What the heck? Talk it over with the vendor and we are puzzled (the vendor has been helpful through this) so I/we decide on new connector tubes. I get the new larger 6. 7 tubes that supersede the 5. 9 tubes. In go the new tubes and no joy, the leak rate is exactly the same. Vendor is now sending me a spare set of injectors to test.
My question is has anybody had this type of trouble? Injector/connector tube installation isn’t rocket science people do it everyday with little trouble. I’ve tested all the tube nuts in the head without the tubes and they thread fully into the head with no trouble. When installing the tubes and the nut just snugged up by hand I can twist the injector and feel the tubes wiggle side to side so they are seating into the injector. Can an injector leak under high pressure in the truck where they won’t on the test stand? I guess I’ll find out if the injectors are the culprit when I get the test units installed after they arrive next week. Any comments would be greatly appreciated.