While at Cummins the other day I spotted a "Gottahavit". I stopped in to see how they were doing with a truck that had come from Dodge, supposedly with a bad pump. The tech told me he had performed a test using this tool and the pump was good. Well it didn't surprise me that Dodge had misdiagnosed the problem, that's why the truck wan now at Cummins.
The dealership had red tagged the warranty and the truck sat for three weeks with nothing being done with it. They said the pump was toast as a result of something the owner had done, and to fix it would run several thousand bucks! It struck me that with this pump tester we can call their bluff. We recently had a similiar situation with another dealer which turned out to be a bad injector! The dealer even logged that the truck had the pump wire tapped. This was out and out BS!
In general I think it's time for the dealers to quit trying to snow the truck owners and do their job properly.
So, here's how the device works. It has a red and black lead which hook onto the battery. You pull the pump connector off the back of the pump and then connect the tester to the pump. In your hand you have the controller which had a kill button, a high idle button, and a light to indicate the power supply is good. So, with the OEM harness now off the pump, the only signal communicating with the pump is coming from the tester. You would start the truck at this point and if it starts it will idle at the normal rpm. You then hit the high idle button to see if the pump responds. If it goes to high idle the pump is fine. If it doesn't start, then the pump is bad.
No gray area.
Guys have learned to jump the #6 & #7 pins to test the VP44, but this tool is very simple and quick to use for those that aren't interested in building their own device. If you call cummins, it's part number 3163834. It isn't cheap, but for a shop I think it makes sense to purchase the tool.
The dealership had red tagged the warranty and the truck sat for three weeks with nothing being done with it. They said the pump was toast as a result of something the owner had done, and to fix it would run several thousand bucks! It struck me that with this pump tester we can call their bluff. We recently had a similiar situation with another dealer which turned out to be a bad injector! The dealer even logged that the truck had the pump wire tapped. This was out and out BS!

So, here's how the device works. It has a red and black lead which hook onto the battery. You pull the pump connector off the back of the pump and then connect the tester to the pump. In your hand you have the controller which had a kill button, a high idle button, and a light to indicate the power supply is good. So, with the OEM harness now off the pump, the only signal communicating with the pump is coming from the tester. You would start the truck at this point and if it starts it will idle at the normal rpm. You then hit the high idle button to see if the pump responds. If it goes to high idle the pump is fine. If it doesn't start, then the pump is bad.
No gray area.
Guys have learned to jump the #6 & #7 pins to test the VP44, but this tool is very simple and quick to use for those that aren't interested in building their own device. If you call cummins, it's part number 3163834. It isn't cheap, but for a shop I think it makes sense to purchase the tool.