The approved procedure for diagnosing all powertrain control
system faults is included in the Strategy Based Diagnostic Flow . You must
perform the preliminary checks and the Powertrain On-Board Diagnostic
(OBD) System Check in order to successfully diagnose and repair the powertrain
systems.
Important: Use a scan tool to in order to clear the diagnostic trouble codes (DTCs)
from the powertrain control module (PCM) memory.
The PCM can have a failure which can affect only one circuit. Follow
the approved diagnostic procedures in order to determine which circuit
has a problem and where the problem is located. If a diagnostic table
indicates that the either PCM connections or the PCM is the cause of
a problem, you replace the PCM is replaced but the problem still exists,
one of the following conditions may exist:
• | The electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM)
program is not correct for the application. |
• | Incorrect components may cause a malfunction and may or may not
set a DTC. |
• | The problem is intermittent and the problem is not present at
the time the that you diagnosed the system. In this case, refer to the
Symptoms
portion of the manual. Carefully inspect
all suspected components and all wiring that is associated with the affected
system. |
• | The problem is caused by a shorted solenoid, relay coil, or harness.
The PCM turns the solenoids and relays ON and OFF via internal electronic
switches called drivers. Each driver is part of a group of seven output
driver modules. A shorted solenoid, relay coil, or harness will not
damage the PCM but will cause the solenoid or the relay to be inoperative. |