MaverickH1
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I'm hoping these issues link to the same root cause, so I'm grouping them together. 6.5L GEP engine, 4L80E transmission.
I have a tachometer that SOMETIMES acts like this as well as sometimes just pegging all the way at full RPM even though the engine is clearly not at that speed:
https://youtu.be/Ujm57lZa9TI
Also, the transmission randomly downshifts for a split second. This started probably 2 months ago. The most consistent time it would happen was around cruising throttle at 45 mph. It seemed like a computer couldn't decide which gear to be in. RPMs would jump slightly for a split second like it shifted down and then back up immediately or something. It almost sounded like a slip. But slips should happen under load. It never slips under load. Transmission fluid was inspected, it smelled a little burned and was a little high, so I drained it and changed it and things seemed to be better for about a week. But it was a problem that would only happen sometimes anyway.
It came back (or perhaps never went away), and I decided to just live with it because it didn't seem damaging. I started buying the supplies to completely change the fluid and the filter.
Then yesterday it felt like the truck was stumbling a little bit under load. The engine sounds healthy, but you could feel it not having a consistent acceleration. Every time the tranmission has a problem, the tachometer is acting up like the above video.
Also in the last few days, it developed a new problem where it would act like it was in 2nd gear while you were at low RPM in a parking lot or something low speed, and it would all of a sudden take off as if the throttle position sensor gave a high reading, at the same "cruising" throttle position it would drop into a lower gear and the engine would throttle up. It would jump forward a little tiny bit, not enough to be a safety concern but enough to scare you.
In any case... I started trying to find out what would be going on this morning, as the truck is parked until this is more understood. It appears I wired my tachometer to a Mechanical Tachometer on the back side of the engine as the directions indicated. The assumption is that this mechanical tachometer gets its engine speed signal from a mechanical attachment to the engine itself, and then creates an electrical signal that I'm tapping into with the in-cab Tachometer. But I'm not seeing where that electrical signal goes or how it is used.
I *THINK* the Transmission Control Module utilizes a throttle position sensor as well as an engine speed sensor to perform its calculations and choose the gear accordingly, as well as the A2 brake position sensor factoring in somehow. Is the mechanical tachometer not used at all for this? The 6.5L engine parts list shows a dedicated Engine Speed Sensor near the front/left part of the engine. I'm assuming that's the actual signal to the TCM. I also assume that the mechanical tachometer is purely used to go to the diagnostic connector next to the transfer case selector, and is actually not used at all during normal operation.
Suggestions/expertise welcome. My gut feeling is it's something like these possibilities:
1) Throttle position sensor or engine speed sensor failing. Mechanical Tachometer signal does not go to the TCM, and the In-Cab Tachometer I have is just a bad unit, or the wiring isn't as solid as I'd like.
2) Mechanical Tach IS used by the TCM, and it's failing. Causing both the In-Cab Tach issue and the transmission issue.
3) TCM failing.
4) Transmission already on its way out. Perhaps a bad rebuilt unit.
The truck is at my shop where I'm trying to start up a WaterJet cutting business, so I don't have it here with me to look at right now. Just me and the TMs.
I have a tachometer that SOMETIMES acts like this as well as sometimes just pegging all the way at full RPM even though the engine is clearly not at that speed:
https://youtu.be/Ujm57lZa9TI
Also, the transmission randomly downshifts for a split second. This started probably 2 months ago. The most consistent time it would happen was around cruising throttle at 45 mph. It seemed like a computer couldn't decide which gear to be in. RPMs would jump slightly for a split second like it shifted down and then back up immediately or something. It almost sounded like a slip. But slips should happen under load. It never slips under load. Transmission fluid was inspected, it smelled a little burned and was a little high, so I drained it and changed it and things seemed to be better for about a week. But it was a problem that would only happen sometimes anyway.
It came back (or perhaps never went away), and I decided to just live with it because it didn't seem damaging. I started buying the supplies to completely change the fluid and the filter.
Then yesterday it felt like the truck was stumbling a little bit under load. The engine sounds healthy, but you could feel it not having a consistent acceleration. Every time the tranmission has a problem, the tachometer is acting up like the above video.
Also in the last few days, it developed a new problem where it would act like it was in 2nd gear while you were at low RPM in a parking lot or something low speed, and it would all of a sudden take off as if the throttle position sensor gave a high reading, at the same "cruising" throttle position it would drop into a lower gear and the engine would throttle up. It would jump forward a little tiny bit, not enough to be a safety concern but enough to scare you.
In any case... I started trying to find out what would be going on this morning, as the truck is parked until this is more understood. It appears I wired my tachometer to a Mechanical Tachometer on the back side of the engine as the directions indicated. The assumption is that this mechanical tachometer gets its engine speed signal from a mechanical attachment to the engine itself, and then creates an electrical signal that I'm tapping into with the in-cab Tachometer. But I'm not seeing where that electrical signal goes or how it is used.
I *THINK* the Transmission Control Module utilizes a throttle position sensor as well as an engine speed sensor to perform its calculations and choose the gear accordingly, as well as the A2 brake position sensor factoring in somehow. Is the mechanical tachometer not used at all for this? The 6.5L engine parts list shows a dedicated Engine Speed Sensor near the front/left part of the engine. I'm assuming that's the actual signal to the TCM. I also assume that the mechanical tachometer is purely used to go to the diagnostic connector next to the transfer case selector, and is actually not used at all during normal operation.
Suggestions/expertise welcome. My gut feeling is it's something like these possibilities:
1) Throttle position sensor or engine speed sensor failing. Mechanical Tachometer signal does not go to the TCM, and the In-Cab Tachometer I have is just a bad unit, or the wiring isn't as solid as I'd like.
2) Mechanical Tach IS used by the TCM, and it's failing. Causing both the In-Cab Tach issue and the transmission issue.
3) TCM failing.
4) Transmission already on its way out. Perhaps a bad rebuilt unit.
The truck is at my shop where I'm trying to start up a WaterJet cutting business, so I don't have it here with me to look at right now. Just me and the TMs.
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