When I installed my Stage 1 CP3 last week and did the first start I was getting some really rough idling or it would just die. I would have to hold it at high idle just to get the truck to run. Finally everything settled down and all was good. At this time I only had a P0237 code = MAP sensor boost low. I just figured this was due to me disconnecting harnesses etc while installing the studs/twins/Walbro etc.
So over the past week everything was running great until this evening. This is what happened.
I started it up (hot start) and it started idling from 500 rpm to 1000 rpm over and over again - all while spewing white smoke. I got the rpm up and everything settled down, but still rolled the white smoke and then eventually cleared up. Then roll to a stop and then the rpm goes up and down again with the white smoke.
I couldn't see what the rail pressure was since my SPA gauge useless backlighting was non-functional so I waited until I pulled into my garage, shut down, and restarted. The truck is idling at 4500 psi then up to 6500 psi and so forth until it settles down. Every so often at constant 5250 psi idel pressure, the rail pressure would ever-so-faintly blip down to 4500 psi then shoot up to 8000 psi and then right back down to 5250 psi. All the while the feed at the CP3 inlet is at constant pressure.
After a few more shut downs and restarts it finally does the constant rpm up and down thing again with the white smoke. Rail pressures are 5250 psi to 8000 psi or so over and over again. My stock idle rail pressure has always been 5250 psi. Good rail pressure should equal normal injection timing. Low rail pressure should equal late injection timing = white smoke. So I pull the codes:
P0237 MAP sensor voltage too low
P0647 AC voltage too high
P02269 WIF condition
P02269 makes sense since I washed the truck last weekend and got water on the WIF plug since it is now disconnected because of the Walbro setup. It's just a resistance type circuit anyway that sets off a light on the dash.
P0237 I actually got this code on the first start after I finished the 3 week project so I cannot say if it is related to this issue. If the MAP is reading low then the truck will not fuel - at least that is my take on it. Hence the rpm going wacky??? I. e. late fueling = late injection timing = white smoke.
P0647 - well I looked on TDR and DTR and saw that one guy got it when his AC wire chaffed and shorted to ground. This in turn affected a pile of other sensors readings connected to this harness in term of 0-5 v readings and generated all types of codes included the MAP and injector codes.
I'm going to pull the MAP and see if it's dirty or something. I do have a spare MAP in my parts stash just in case. I'm also going to try to trace the harness to the AC unit, Maybe I screwed it up when I installed the twins???
I really do not feel like pulling the CP3 and putting the stock one back one only to have the same problems.
Any thoughts or advice? Do you think I am on the right track? Please refer to the pictures in the threads below, i. e. AC clutch wires chaffed. These pictures are troubling considering what others have observed.
Here are the DTR and TDR threads of interest:
http://www.dieseltruckresource.com/dev/showthread.php?t=81936
https://www.turbodieselregister.com/forums/showthread.php?t=143897
https://www.turbodieselregister.com/forums/showthread.php?t=130308
So over the past week everything was running great until this evening. This is what happened.
I started it up (hot start) and it started idling from 500 rpm to 1000 rpm over and over again - all while spewing white smoke. I got the rpm up and everything settled down, but still rolled the white smoke and then eventually cleared up. Then roll to a stop and then the rpm goes up and down again with the white smoke.
I couldn't see what the rail pressure was since my SPA gauge useless backlighting was non-functional so I waited until I pulled into my garage, shut down, and restarted. The truck is idling at 4500 psi then up to 6500 psi and so forth until it settles down. Every so often at constant 5250 psi idel pressure, the rail pressure would ever-so-faintly blip down to 4500 psi then shoot up to 8000 psi and then right back down to 5250 psi. All the while the feed at the CP3 inlet is at constant pressure.
After a few more shut downs and restarts it finally does the constant rpm up and down thing again with the white smoke. Rail pressures are 5250 psi to 8000 psi or so over and over again. My stock idle rail pressure has always been 5250 psi. Good rail pressure should equal normal injection timing. Low rail pressure should equal late injection timing = white smoke. So I pull the codes:
P0237 MAP sensor voltage too low
P0647 AC voltage too high
P02269 WIF condition
P02269 makes sense since I washed the truck last weekend and got water on the WIF plug since it is now disconnected because of the Walbro setup. It's just a resistance type circuit anyway that sets off a light on the dash.
P0237 I actually got this code on the first start after I finished the 3 week project so I cannot say if it is related to this issue. If the MAP is reading low then the truck will not fuel - at least that is my take on it. Hence the rpm going wacky??? I. e. late fueling = late injection timing = white smoke.
P0647 - well I looked on TDR and DTR and saw that one guy got it when his AC wire chaffed and shorted to ground. This in turn affected a pile of other sensors readings connected to this harness in term of 0-5 v readings and generated all types of codes included the MAP and injector codes.
I'm going to pull the MAP and see if it's dirty or something. I do have a spare MAP in my parts stash just in case. I'm also going to try to trace the harness to the AC unit, Maybe I screwed it up when I installed the twins???
I really do not feel like pulling the CP3 and putting the stock one back one only to have the same problems.
Any thoughts or advice? Do you think I am on the right track? Please refer to the pictures in the threads below, i. e. AC clutch wires chaffed. These pictures are troubling considering what others have observed.
Here are the DTR and TDR threads of interest:
http://www.dieseltruckresource.com/dev/showthread.php?t=81936
https://www.turbodieselregister.com/forums/showthread.php?t=143897
https://www.turbodieselregister.com/forums/showthread.php?t=130308