I've attached a picture taken with my cell phone under the hood of a TDR member's common-rail truck. I couldn't fit a traditional digital camera up in there to get a better shot. I won't state who it is or what year the truck is - to protect the innocent... yeah, that's it. (They will chime in eventually if necessary. )
Anywho - this person stopped by a few weeks back and complained of a hard start condition on occasion. Since the weather has been so lovely around here - I was wondering if there was ice built up on the tone ring for the crank trigger... amongst other possible issues.
I had the owner start the truck and pop the hood so I could do a quick once-over. My eyes nearly popped out of my head when I saw that the harmoic balancer/tone ring was wobbling back and forth at an idle and causing the whole truck to shake just a little bit. Whoa! Shut 'er down!
When I got under the truck to have a look see - there wasn't any ice on the tone ring... but I did notice some things amiss regarding the harmoic balancer:
I put a socket on the remaining bolts and found that the two 'good' bolts were loose. What's even more interesting is that the threads in the crank galled up due to metallic dust and other goodness from all the vibration... so I couldn't back the two good bolts the whole way out and they never fully tightened up. Excellent.
I got it going pretty straight by carefully tightening/loosening the bolts (in an attept to chase the threads... ) with lots of penetrating oil and getting them torqued down the best I could - then I sent the owner on their merry way to visit the dealership of their choice... not before warning them to shut the engine down if they notice any noise or increase in vibration at all.
The truck is currently at a dealership in an undisclosed location and is being taken care of since it is below the 100k mi mark for sweet, sweet warranty coverage.
They have it apart and here's what they're replacing:
I could have sworn that I heard of other common-rail trucks having this issue. If not - this poor soul gets to be an example for others. More likely than not, this is a freaky unfortunate mishap... at least I hope so.
Beers,
Matt
Anywho - this person stopped by a few weeks back and complained of a hard start condition on occasion. Since the weather has been so lovely around here - I was wondering if there was ice built up on the tone ring for the crank trigger... amongst other possible issues.
I had the owner start the truck and pop the hood so I could do a quick once-over. My eyes nearly popped out of my head when I saw that the harmoic balancer/tone ring was wobbling back and forth at an idle and causing the whole truck to shake just a little bit. Whoa! Shut 'er down!
When I got under the truck to have a look see - there wasn't any ice on the tone ring... but I did notice some things amiss regarding the harmoic balancer:
- One bolt was missing
- One bolt's head was cracked and ready for departure
- The balancer/tone ring were sort of flopping in the breeze
I put a socket on the remaining bolts and found that the two 'good' bolts were loose. What's even more interesting is that the threads in the crank galled up due to metallic dust and other goodness from all the vibration... so I couldn't back the two good bolts the whole way out and they never fully tightened up. Excellent.
I got it going pretty straight by carefully tightening/loosening the bolts (in an attept to chase the threads... ) with lots of penetrating oil and getting them torqued down the best I could - then I sent the owner on their merry way to visit the dealership of their choice... not before warning them to shut the engine down if they notice any noise or increase in vibration at all.
The truck is currently at a dealership in an undisclosed location and is being taken care of since it is below the 100k mi mark for sweet, sweet warranty coverage.
They have it apart and here's what they're replacing:
- 4 little bolts - maybe properly torqued and will probably have Loc-Tite on them this time around
- Harmoic balancer
- Tone ring
- Crankshaft
- ... and hopefully all rod/main bearings
I could have sworn that I heard of other common-rail trucks having this issue. If not - this poor soul gets to be an example for others. More likely than not, this is a freaky unfortunate mishap... at least I hope so.
Beers,
Matt