• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

No start A1

GreyEnvy

New member
7
5
3
Location
North Mississippi
Picking up M1078 A1 (15k serial, so early A1) from GSA, it had dead batteries and had to be boosted to start. The volt meter bounced from one end to the other and the transmission would only engage for a few seconds at a time.

I pulled the four dead 6TL and replaced with 2 group 31 using the usual schematic from the forums. At this point it cranked right up and the transmission seemed to be working.

I let it high idle 15 minutes while doing other things, then turned it off and now it won't start. It turns over plenty fast but makes zero effort to fire. Not even a hint.

I feel like there is some sort of start inhibit going on.

I checked all the circuit breakers, swapped a few around, swapped a few relays around (not mixing up the 12V and 24V), no change.

The yard guy said they won't run on 2 batteries because the computer senses there isn't 4 present. But I know most people here are running 2 batteries.

I can't get the TM to download on my tablet.

Ideas?
 
Last edited:

Keith Knight

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,006
1,905
113
Location
Wauchula, FL
My 2003 A1 did that when the ECM / Engine control module died. I had to get a mobile cat service tech to connect to it and diagnosed it.
 

Ronmar

Well-known member
3,881
7,549
113
Location
Port angeles wa
You should get a check light from the ECU to indicate it is Powered/booting up.

they also added a power filter down by the ECU these usually get bypassed and there is probably a reason for that.

the hand pump doesn't even work?
 

fuzzytoaster

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
4,318
3,208
113
Location
Fort Worth, Texas
The yard guy said they won't run on 2 batteries because the computer senses there isn't 4 present. But I know most people here are running 2 batteries.
You can use 2 batteries yes. He doesn't know jack nor does the computer about number of batteries.

Picking up M1078 A1 (15k serial, so early A1) from GSA, it had dead batteries and had to be boosted to start. The volt meter bounced from one end to the other and the transmission would only engage for a few seconds at a time.
1641949731863.png
The TCM will do a voltage check and if too high or ohm's out of spec it will default to safe mode and not move.

I pulled the four dead 6TL and replaced with 2 group 31 using the usual schematic from the forums. At this point it cranked right up and the transmission seemed to be working.

I let it high idle 15 minutes while doing other things, then turned it off and now it won't start. It turns over plenty fast but makes zero effort to fire. Not even a hint.

I feel like there is some sort of start inhibit going on.

I checked all the circuit breakers, swapped a few around, swapped a few relays around (not mixing up the 12V and 24V), no change.
This could be a simple fix or ECM is very dead. Start simple.
  1. Does it crank?
  2. Do you see smoke from exhaust?
  3. Does it fire on ether/starting fluid?
  4. Do you have fuel prime?
  5. Do you have a J1939 OBDII capable device to plug into the kick panel to communicate with the truck? If so then try to pull codes.
  6. If still no fire then lift cab and remove ECM. Take it to Cat and ask them to communicate with the ECM. If they can't it's dead.
The unfortunate truth is all ECMs have batteries and some of these units blank out if the battery dies. I did a write up a few years ago with nearly the same symptoms as you have. The ECM was bad in mine and maybe it had one last go before it went on yours. Keep us posted.
 

Suprman

Well-known member
Supporting Vendor
6,861
697
113
Location
Stratford/Connecticut
The filter inline with the power to the ecm is a common culprit. Not enough fuel pressure at the pump and the computer wont open injectors. You can plug in a standard heavy truck diagnostic reader and see if any codes or the ecm even communicates. There is a breaker for the ecm. The power panels in those trucks can suffer from lousy solder joints causing intermittent issues.
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks