(before you might get put off by my long winded post, please scroll down and look at the photos from another rig on this first page..... )
Hello,
It looks like I just lost one of my Intake manifold heater relays. (aka grid heater). The one relay failed closed, thereby sending the entire dual battery current to that one heater. I was lucky enough to be standing there so as to be able to disconnect it manually.
I was starting the truck this am and in mid crank the truck just died. I turned the key again and it acted like the dual battery pack was instantly dead... . For once I had the right train of thought and went directly to the intake heater assy first. Yep, hot and getting hotter by the second... . I could not remember where the power came from and wasted some time pulling the fuse box open and reading the inside cover... I quickly gave up there and unscrewed the very hot nuts and wires from the firewall side of the grid heaters... . The boot on one was already melting... .
As my wife was standing there to run errands, I just wrapped up the wires and had to put too tiny portable battery packs on to get the truck started. No shortage of warm air inside the intake manifold so it started quickly...
While waiting at a store for my wife I put the volt meter to the relays and discovered one was shorted closed with the truck off
Again, full current power available at the heater end of that one cable with the truck 100% turned off, key in my pocket! I decided to reconnect the 'good' relay and it's one heater lead for now. When starting and driving, the amp gauge shows the correct pattern of cycle drains as expected.
After coming home I did the old TDR search and see some great ideas for how to control the heaters but did not find anything regarding how to 'safe' the shorting / overheating potential in this heater circuit.
Am I correct that there is no fusing or protection anywhere on the power side of this and thus no way to halt a runaway like mine?
So, I am looking for more ideas on how to make this a bit safer and to prevent me from being stranded somewhere.
I have a few ideas:
Have any of our trucks actually been destroyed by a grid heater runaway?
I think that at 140K miles and being a 99, I'd be hard pressed to replace this truck on what my insurance company might come up with for a total loss fire. Besides I am kind of fond of the aging beast. .
Thanks for any ideas from the forum!
David
This thread is to inquire about how to make the high current grid heaters more protected from one or both of the power relays sticking closed. This thread is not meant to debate the pros and cons of the heaters or discuss oil switches , thermal controls or toggle switches which are all seemingly on the low current control side of things. I've done some thread searches this am and see some great stuff for the control side and some wonderful debates about the heaters themselves. Now please help me find what is out there for protecting the high current power side of things... thank you!!
Hello,
It looks like I just lost one of my Intake manifold heater relays. (aka grid heater). The one relay failed closed, thereby sending the entire dual battery current to that one heater. I was lucky enough to be standing there so as to be able to disconnect it manually.
I was starting the truck this am and in mid crank the truck just died. I turned the key again and it acted like the dual battery pack was instantly dead... . For once I had the right train of thought and went directly to the intake heater assy first. Yep, hot and getting hotter by the second... . I could not remember where the power came from and wasted some time pulling the fuse box open and reading the inside cover... I quickly gave up there and unscrewed the very hot nuts and wires from the firewall side of the grid heaters... . The boot on one was already melting... .
As my wife was standing there to run errands, I just wrapped up the wires and had to put too tiny portable battery packs on to get the truck started. No shortage of warm air inside the intake manifold so it started quickly...

While waiting at a store for my wife I put the volt meter to the relays and discovered one was shorted closed with the truck off

After coming home I did the old TDR search and see some great ideas for how to control the heaters but did not find anything regarding how to 'safe' the shorting / overheating potential in this heater circuit.
Am I correct that there is no fusing or protection anywhere on the power side of this and thus no way to halt a runaway like mine?
So, I am looking for more ideas on how to make this a bit safer and to prevent me from being stranded somewhere.
I have a few ideas:
- A fuse would be too simple but I suspect that sizing it large enough to allow the heaters to work normally would likely prevent it from protecting the circuit.
- A simple battery disconnect switch in the feed side of the relays could halt the problem if one knows it is going on. The con is that you have to know the problem exists..... Surely you could use it seasonally but... .
- A high current thermal snap switch that can carry the current that these heaters demand and would open if the horn is getting too hot. Does such a high current snap switch exist?
- What about a large constant duty relay in the feed side before the oem relay pack that has a simple low current thermal snap switch mounted on the horn and is powered by the ignition...
Have any of our trucks actually been destroyed by a grid heater runaway?
I think that at 140K miles and being a 99, I'd be hard pressed to replace this truck on what my insurance company might come up with for a total loss fire. Besides I am kind of fond of the aging beast. .

Thanks for any ideas from the forum!
David
This thread is to inquire about how to make the high current grid heaters more protected from one or both of the power relays sticking closed. This thread is not meant to debate the pros and cons of the heaters or discuss oil switches , thermal controls or toggle switches which are all seemingly on the low current control side of things. I've done some thread searches this am and see some great stuff for the control side and some wonderful debates about the heaters themselves. Now please help me find what is out there for protecting the high current power side of things... thank you!!
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