JayMaechtlen
Industrial
- Jun 28, 2001
- 1,044
More tales from my Sister the truck driver.
Not just a driver, she and her hubby are owner-operators. That is, they each have a late model Freightliner and put some serious miles on them.
The unit in question is still under warranty, with only 2-3 hundred thousand miles on it.
It seems that sometimes, it will refuse to start. That is, it will not even try to engage the starter.
When it does this, other amusing symptoms are observed, such as the radio volume and other settings reverting to default. After multiple attempts, the vehicle will eventually start.
Of course, it will usually refuse to manifest symptoms when in the shop.
Of course, its on-board diagnostics have no record of the occurrence, nor any clues of what might have occurred.
She got lucky - she had it in the shop for a different mysterious ailment, and it manifested the no-start symptom instead.
Of course, it went away before they could get diagnostics connected up. But, at least the mechanic saw it happen!
It seems that Freightliner has seperate/different diagnostic systems for the engine, the transmission, and possibly some other systems. Those diagnostic systems run on Windows, and may or may not run at any particular time.
This really sounds like several kinds of "bad old days"!
(Did Freightliner sub the software out to Toyota?)
(El Truck es Hecho in Mexico)
cheers
Jay
Jay Maechtlen
Not just a driver, she and her hubby are owner-operators. That is, they each have a late model Freightliner and put some serious miles on them.
The unit in question is still under warranty, with only 2-3 hundred thousand miles on it.
It seems that sometimes, it will refuse to start. That is, it will not even try to engage the starter.
When it does this, other amusing symptoms are observed, such as the radio volume and other settings reverting to default. After multiple attempts, the vehicle will eventually start.
Of course, it will usually refuse to manifest symptoms when in the shop.
Of course, its on-board diagnostics have no record of the occurrence, nor any clues of what might have occurred.
She got lucky - she had it in the shop for a different mysterious ailment, and it manifested the no-start symptom instead.
Of course, it went away before they could get diagnostics connected up. But, at least the mechanic saw it happen!
It seems that Freightliner has seperate/different diagnostic systems for the engine, the transmission, and possibly some other systems. Those diagnostic systems run on Windows, and may or may not run at any particular time.
This really sounds like several kinds of "bad old days"!
(Did Freightliner sub the software out to Toyota?)
(El Truck es Hecho in Mexico)
cheers
Jay
Jay Maechtlen