MaverickH1
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- Location
- Roanoke, VA
So my M1123 is having trouble starting when it's cold out.
I checked the cold advance circuit and everything is working the way it should. Manually hitting the throttle after the wait light goes off is done regularly to engage the cold advance plunger since apparently the electrical system isn't strong enough to do that on its own on these trucks or Hummer H1s. Almost every time I start it when it is mildly cold (50s) I have to pump the throttle to get it to start.
Now that the temperatures are in the 40s and 30s nothing gets it to start. It cranks just fine, the starter is going fast enough. White smoke is coming out of the tail pipe. The wait light stays on longer when it is colder. I narrowed it down to two areas:
- Glow plug system
- Fuel delivery
First step with the fuel delivery was to change out the fuel filter and bleed the lines. I did that and bled to the fuel filter, but haven't bled to the injectors yet. The problem remained.
Then today I started looking closer at the Glow Plug circuit. I pulled off one of the glow plug electrical connectors and hooked up a voltmeter to it. I clamped one end of the voltmeter to a bare bolt and then confirmed a good ground by testing continuity across another bare bolt in the engine compartment. After confirming a good ground I put the probe into the glow plug connector, and it beeped like it had continuity. But only for a split second. Looking at the meter, it had 90 ohms of continuity. So it appears that might glow plug circuit might be shorted.
Continuing with the rest of my test, I kept the probes connected and checked voltage. As soon as the key was on voltage popped to 24 volts like it should, but it never went off. I waited for about 15 seconds after the WAIT light went off and it still had voltage. I've got both the Protective Control Box and Glow Plug Controller logic diagrams back home drawn up with what each wire's function is. I plan on checking that again to see what is realistically happening to cause the problem.
I'm just curious if anyone has any input.
- I see there's another thread with a similar problem called "turnover trouble". 'Tis the season, I guess. Reading the G503 sticky now. -
I checked the cold advance circuit and everything is working the way it should. Manually hitting the throttle after the wait light goes off is done regularly to engage the cold advance plunger since apparently the electrical system isn't strong enough to do that on its own on these trucks or Hummer H1s. Almost every time I start it when it is mildly cold (50s) I have to pump the throttle to get it to start.
Now that the temperatures are in the 40s and 30s nothing gets it to start. It cranks just fine, the starter is going fast enough. White smoke is coming out of the tail pipe. The wait light stays on longer when it is colder. I narrowed it down to two areas:
- Glow plug system
- Fuel delivery
First step with the fuel delivery was to change out the fuel filter and bleed the lines. I did that and bled to the fuel filter, but haven't bled to the injectors yet. The problem remained.
Then today I started looking closer at the Glow Plug circuit. I pulled off one of the glow plug electrical connectors and hooked up a voltmeter to it. I clamped one end of the voltmeter to a bare bolt and then confirmed a good ground by testing continuity across another bare bolt in the engine compartment. After confirming a good ground I put the probe into the glow plug connector, and it beeped like it had continuity. But only for a split second. Looking at the meter, it had 90 ohms of continuity. So it appears that might glow plug circuit might be shorted.
Continuing with the rest of my test, I kept the probes connected and checked voltage. As soon as the key was on voltage popped to 24 volts like it should, but it never went off. I waited for about 15 seconds after the WAIT light went off and it still had voltage. I've got both the Protective Control Box and Glow Plug Controller logic diagrams back home drawn up with what each wire's function is. I plan on checking that again to see what is realistically happening to cause the problem.
I'm just curious if anyone has any input.
- I see there's another thread with a similar problem called "turnover trouble". 'Tis the season, I guess. Reading the G503 sticky now. -
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