Thanks Rusy Gears for the input and suggestions. I have not serviced the dryer & filters but have them in hand and was just waiting for the next free, weather tolerable day to do so. I also had the delight of finding a box of parts left in my truck courtesy of Uncle Sam containing (amoung other things) six brand new wheel valves. Thought I'd service the dryer/filters and then replace all of the wheel valves and look closely while I'm in there for oil in the hollow studs, bad connections, etc.. I'm also wondering if it would be a good or bad idea for me to blow air into the hubs to see if they hold pressure like the TM troubleshooting section outlines. It would be good diagnostics and easy to do at that point. But, is there a chance that the test will CAUSE an ottherwise acceptable seal to blow out? Your thoughts on that?
Lastly, I saw a NOS CTIS manifold for sale on ebay for $99.00. Sounded like cheap insurance so I bought it. I guess if the above measures do not fix it I could put on the new manifold...
Thanks,
Ross
Spent the afternoon servicing the air dryer assembly. Took it off the truck so I could inspect, clean and service it well. Replaced the two filters on top. There was a bit of moisture and gunk in the
coalescing filter cavity but the coalesent filter itself wasn't really that dirty. Replaced it and the desiccant spin on filter and o-rings as well as the dryer purge valve. Tested it and everything was good. Took it for a spin to town (about 10 miles total) and turned on the CTIS half way into trip. Tires were low due to me having it on Mud/Snow setting last (though oddly it had seemingly only deflated the rear four tires and the front two were still aired up pretty round). The system initially did appear to be airing up the tires as the tire pressure started rising from 12 psi area. But, it could only manage to show a max of 17 psi tire pressure on the console when set to Highway mode after several miles at >2,200 rpms? Manifold pressure test was no better and actually couldn't even get past about 10 psi when it cycled this time - then went to Flat? mode.
Again, front tires never seemed to deflate much so were still aired up (and equally) though the two back axles seemed to have pretty equal (and low) tire pressure. What would make the front axle respond differently than the rear two? Is that a manifold issue, clogged front tubing, bad rear seals in BOTH rear axles???
So, just aired the tires up when in town at the truck stop and turned the system back off. When under the truck I did note that the discharge port on the manifold was quite oily and cruddy looking. Is that indicative of a seal failure or manifold problem. Like I mentioned, I have a new manifold in transit and (though I intend to and will asap) have not taken off the CTIS wheel guards yet to check wheel valves, tubing, hub pressure, etc.. There may be some leaks but nothing so loud that I can hear it over the truck when it's running...
Do these symptoms turn any light bulbs on in anyones knowledgeable heads?
Thanks,
Ross