JeepBuilder
TDR MEMBER
I wanted to wait a while to see if it was really gone. I have a couple posts on dead pedal and I wanted to do a stand alone post so the answer did not get lost in a thread somewhere. First off I won't say for sure my findings are not the only cause of dead pedal. Maybe there are others. I ruled them out with the thousands I spent replacing parts and working on the truck over and over. For some history the truck is a 2001 24 valve VP44 3500 dually. In above average condition with about 185K on the clock. I fought this problem for 4 years. It was a conversation with a guy at a mountain lake who was fishing with his Dodge sitting next to him. He said he and his daughter's truck would get random dead pedal and they both knew to clean up the battery terminals and the problem would go away for a significant amount of time. Then a second conversation here at my home with a guy who worked at a dodge dealership for 20 years who was buying some jeep parts I had for sale. He stated that when ever a truck came in with dead pedal the shop would clean the terminals and sometimes replace the batteries or cables and it would fix the problem. I looked for weeks and weeks on every single forum. I spent hours and hours in the evenings looking for a direction. Hundreds and hundreds of complaints and nobody ever followed up with a post saying hey I found it. Well that is why I am posting this. And I need to say if someone here had suggested cleaning the battery terminals and I overlooked it, well that is my fault. If I am going to beat myself up I like to do it well. So I had many trips home bucking and belching black smoke. White knuckling the wheel and hoping I would make it home. It always generated lots of work and high levels of frustration. The truck has full ISSPRO instrumentation. Fuel pressure, exhaust temp, and boost.
What was done with dead pedal coming back every time. Sometimes 200 miles, sometimes 600 miles.
Lift the truck in the air and clean and coat every single ground I could fine. I even replace some missing ground leads. Coated with liquid electrical tape after cleaning and dielectric gel.
Bought a rebuilt OFI tuner ready VP44
Disconnected the Edge tuner and eventually sent it in for a check up. They stated it had a bad chip and fixed it. It has not been reinstalled.
Replaced the MAPP sensor
Replaced the boost fooler alternating with it being disconnected and connected with continual dead pedal
Replaced the APPS and recalibrated numerous times.
Replaced fuel filters several times.
Replaced the ECM with a used unit from a crashed truck. A crashed truck was a running truck. Had the ECM programmed with my VIN and it runs very well. I now have a good spare ECM.
I replaced the battery's with big interstate batteries.
Replaced the alternator
There are probably a few more things I have overlooked.
What I believe fixed my dead pedal.
Based on the two conversations I had about it with random strangers. I removed my battery cables and cut off the failing and cracked clamps. I found a short bit of green corroded copper and I cut them all back to fresh copper and sank them into heavy copper lugs and soldered them followed by epoxy filled heat shrink. Then after installing back into the truck, attached them to all new heavy duty clamps that have the bolt to hold the clamp on the battery and a bolt to secure cables.
I performed the W-T ground mod found at the mopar1973man site. The title of his thread is... "Ground Reference VP44,ECM,PCM,PDC plus TC lock/unlock" This eliminates or reduces the potential of alternator AC interference and shortens and simplifies 5 critical connected grounds. As Dodge built it the alternator located on the passenger side sends power through a 4 plus foot lead right next to the critical ground lead traveling the other direction and lands on the drivers side battery. The 5 critical grounds join in a not so reliable looking gang splice and travel from the drivers side all the way over to the passenger side to land on the passenger side battery. All the while sitting right next the the alternator charge lead.
The fix is landing the alternator charge lead to the passenger side battery. And I added a 150 AMP fuse in the circuit. This lead is now about 15 inches verses 4 some odd feet. The ground lead gets cut at the 5 wire splice and 5 heavy ring eye terminals are crimped and soldered to each ground. Those 5 grounds are landed on the back of the timing cover in a vacant bolt hole and a heavy lead now goes from that new bolt to the drivers side negative terminal. This new lead is also about 15 or so inches verses the OEM lead that travels all the way across the engine bay in what user W-T calls and eventual ground. Not ideal at all.
That is what I believed fixed my dead pedal. I have close to 2 thousand miles on now and no hiccups at all.
And I just learned about an additional modification that I will complete when my truck gets put back on the road after sitting all winter waiting for unsalted roads. That modification is putting a 5 amp fuse in the blue wire which is the alternator field wire. Apparently this blue field wire runs through a 20 amp fuse in the PDC. The PCM, ECM and VP44 all share the same 20 amp fuse in slot G of the PDC. This added smaller fuse protects the PCM against catastrophic failure in the event of grounding the field wire. Which sends the short through the board in the PCM ruining it. The detail on this added modification can be found on the mopar1973man site by the site owner as the poster with a title of "Alternator and PCM protection" .
I hope it is OK to post references to this other site. Information and solutions are the end goal here. That and keeping these trucks on the road and out of the shop. This is my solution so far. I felt it needed to be posted. As mentioned I searched and searched, and found no follow up by hundreds of people. I really need my truck to perform as soon as my home sells. It will haul my life to my new destination. And there is no room for dead pedal in this equation. And there you have it. Happy new year.
Al Temple
What was done with dead pedal coming back every time. Sometimes 200 miles, sometimes 600 miles.
Lift the truck in the air and clean and coat every single ground I could fine. I even replace some missing ground leads. Coated with liquid electrical tape after cleaning and dielectric gel.
Bought a rebuilt OFI tuner ready VP44
Disconnected the Edge tuner and eventually sent it in for a check up. They stated it had a bad chip and fixed it. It has not been reinstalled.
Replaced the MAPP sensor
Replaced the boost fooler alternating with it being disconnected and connected with continual dead pedal
Replaced the APPS and recalibrated numerous times.
Replaced fuel filters several times.
Replaced the ECM with a used unit from a crashed truck. A crashed truck was a running truck. Had the ECM programmed with my VIN and it runs very well. I now have a good spare ECM.
I replaced the battery's with big interstate batteries.
Replaced the alternator
There are probably a few more things I have overlooked.
What I believe fixed my dead pedal.
Based on the two conversations I had about it with random strangers. I removed my battery cables and cut off the failing and cracked clamps. I found a short bit of green corroded copper and I cut them all back to fresh copper and sank them into heavy copper lugs and soldered them followed by epoxy filled heat shrink. Then after installing back into the truck, attached them to all new heavy duty clamps that have the bolt to hold the clamp on the battery and a bolt to secure cables.
I performed the W-T ground mod found at the mopar1973man site. The title of his thread is... "Ground Reference VP44,ECM,PCM,PDC plus TC lock/unlock" This eliminates or reduces the potential of alternator AC interference and shortens and simplifies 5 critical connected grounds. As Dodge built it the alternator located on the passenger side sends power through a 4 plus foot lead right next to the critical ground lead traveling the other direction and lands on the drivers side battery. The 5 critical grounds join in a not so reliable looking gang splice and travel from the drivers side all the way over to the passenger side to land on the passenger side battery. All the while sitting right next the the alternator charge lead.
The fix is landing the alternator charge lead to the passenger side battery. And I added a 150 AMP fuse in the circuit. This lead is now about 15 inches verses 4 some odd feet. The ground lead gets cut at the 5 wire splice and 5 heavy ring eye terminals are crimped and soldered to each ground. Those 5 grounds are landed on the back of the timing cover in a vacant bolt hole and a heavy lead now goes from that new bolt to the drivers side negative terminal. This new lead is also about 15 or so inches verses the OEM lead that travels all the way across the engine bay in what user W-T calls and eventual ground. Not ideal at all.
That is what I believed fixed my dead pedal. I have close to 2 thousand miles on now and no hiccups at all.
And I just learned about an additional modification that I will complete when my truck gets put back on the road after sitting all winter waiting for unsalted roads. That modification is putting a 5 amp fuse in the blue wire which is the alternator field wire. Apparently this blue field wire runs through a 20 amp fuse in the PDC. The PCM, ECM and VP44 all share the same 20 amp fuse in slot G of the PDC. This added smaller fuse protects the PCM against catastrophic failure in the event of grounding the field wire. Which sends the short through the board in the PCM ruining it. The detail on this added modification can be found on the mopar1973man site by the site owner as the poster with a title of "Alternator and PCM protection" .
I hope it is OK to post references to this other site. Information and solutions are the end goal here. That and keeping these trucks on the road and out of the shop. This is my solution so far. I felt it needed to be posted. As mentioned I searched and searched, and found no follow up by hundreds of people. I really need my truck to perform as soon as my home sells. It will haul my life to my new destination. And there is no room for dead pedal in this equation. And there you have it. Happy new year.
Al Temple
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