A friend has a 2003 Dodge that began a hard starting problem last fall at the beginning of the cold weather. Hard starting is defined as requiring extended cranking. Once it did start it took right off, running well, and requiring no sort of recovery period.
The truck did start all winter, displaying this extended cranking symptom, but it did also get somewhat worse. Our attempts to diagnose in early spring revealed that the grid heaters were not working prior to the engine actually starting. Once the engine did start, the heaters did cycle normally.
A next thing he did, at my suggestion, was take it to the dealer and pay for a diagnosis. They found no clear answer in their diagnosis. The dealership employee said, we can't find anything wrong with your truck. They accepted the fact that the truck has a starting problem, but had no definitive thought as to the cause. When asked what they would do to fix it, they said they would try a PCM.
He does not want to spend that much money, since they don't guarantee it will fix the truck.
What does the group think is the thing to do next?
The truck did start all winter, displaying this extended cranking symptom, but it did also get somewhat worse. Our attempts to diagnose in early spring revealed that the grid heaters were not working prior to the engine actually starting. Once the engine did start, the heaters did cycle normally.
A next thing he did, at my suggestion, was take it to the dealer and pay for a diagnosis. They found no clear answer in their diagnosis. The dealership employee said, we can't find anything wrong with your truck. They accepted the fact that the truck has a starting problem, but had no definitive thought as to the cause. When asked what they would do to fix it, they said they would try a PCM.
He does not want to spend that much money, since they don't guarantee it will fix the truck.
What does the group think is the thing to do next?