boogerhook
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- Apr 25, 2024
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- Age
- 34
2019 Ram 3.6 Big Horn 4x4
I preface this with, my battery died very abruptly after a 30 minute drive to a friend's house a few days ago.
Alright, at one point in time, I was a rather competent mechanic. I wasn't intimidated in the slightest at replacing my plugs.
I jumped the truck, with a CEL and it was stuck in first gear. I drove back and parked while I borrowed a vehicle to fetch a battery. Once replaced, it ran great no issues, but had a CEL I didn't care to scan for with no additional symptoms.
I'm at 110k and decided to not delay my 100k maintenance items any more.
Yanked the upper manifold, moved the harness and vacuum connections out of the way and replaced my plugs. Mopar matching part numbers for the same plugs I removed.
I reassembled the manifold, connected all disconnected connectors and hoses.
Truck started right up and idles fine with a slew of lights, but this wasn't terribly alarming after the battery issue. Test drove through the neighborhood with extreme reduced power. Idles smooth and starts normal, but feels like 90% of engine capability is just gone. Will still shift to second, unlike the issue when my battery died.
After clearing a bunch of codes I'm stuck with P0108 (MAP high output), a P0123 (pedal position circuit A high input) and P0222 (pedal position circuit B low input.
Any idea where to start? Online resources are limited, at least on 2 separate search engines I use.
With a pin out diagram and/or flow chart for diag I'll figure it out eventually but can't seem to find anything for mine specifically.
This seems oddly timed, and oddly specific to happen while replacing spark plugs.
Would disconnecting a sensor while the battery is still connected cause a sensor to fail?
I remember thinking I could swing it without disconnecting the entire harness. I had disconnected a few sensors, got to the point I felt I needed to disconnect the large, lever actuated connectors at the computer in the engine bay. I know better than to disconnect those with the battery hot.
Prior to first start after reassembly, when I reconnected the negative cable, there was quite an audible (and visual) pop as the terminal made contact.
Has anyone experienced this?
Should I just replace the map and pedal position sensor?
Any guidance would be appreciated.
Thank you.
I preface this with, my battery died very abruptly after a 30 minute drive to a friend's house a few days ago.
Alright, at one point in time, I was a rather competent mechanic. I wasn't intimidated in the slightest at replacing my plugs.
I jumped the truck, with a CEL and it was stuck in first gear. I drove back and parked while I borrowed a vehicle to fetch a battery. Once replaced, it ran great no issues, but had a CEL I didn't care to scan for with no additional symptoms.
I'm at 110k and decided to not delay my 100k maintenance items any more.
Yanked the upper manifold, moved the harness and vacuum connections out of the way and replaced my plugs. Mopar matching part numbers for the same plugs I removed.
I reassembled the manifold, connected all disconnected connectors and hoses.
Truck started right up and idles fine with a slew of lights, but this wasn't terribly alarming after the battery issue. Test drove through the neighborhood with extreme reduced power. Idles smooth and starts normal, but feels like 90% of engine capability is just gone. Will still shift to second, unlike the issue when my battery died.
After clearing a bunch of codes I'm stuck with P0108 (MAP high output), a P0123 (pedal position circuit A high input) and P0222 (pedal position circuit B low input.
Any idea where to start? Online resources are limited, at least on 2 separate search engines I use.
With a pin out diagram and/or flow chart for diag I'll figure it out eventually but can't seem to find anything for mine specifically.
This seems oddly timed, and oddly specific to happen while replacing spark plugs.
Would disconnecting a sensor while the battery is still connected cause a sensor to fail?
I remember thinking I could swing it without disconnecting the entire harness. I had disconnected a few sensors, got to the point I felt I needed to disconnect the large, lever actuated connectors at the computer in the engine bay. I know better than to disconnect those with the battery hot.
Prior to first start after reassembly, when I reconnected the negative cable, there was quite an audible (and visual) pop as the terminal made contact.
Has anyone experienced this?
Should I just replace the map and pedal position sensor?
Any guidance would be appreciated.
Thank you.
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