Insert joke about other members here ==>I would sugest that the Ignition timing is locked in retard....
Insert joke about other members here ==>I would sugest that the Ignition timing is locked in retard....
Tagging a person like this ==> @strantor is more likely to get his attention.Strantor - did you ever resolve this? I have same truck, same problem, and same thought process. I replaced the knock sesnors with non-OEM, and problem didn't go away. I didn't quite make to applying a scope, however. While doing more research found this thread... I'm hoping you solved it?
Thanks
Yes I eventually solved it a few months later. I should have come back and posted an update; shame on me. I went to the dealership and bought the OEM knock sensors, brought them home and installed them with a torque wrench to the specified value.Strantor - did you ever resolve this? I have same truck, same problem, and same thought process. I replaced the knock sesnors with non-OEM, and problem didn't go away. I didn't quite make to applying a scope, however. While doing more research found this thread... I'm hoping you solved it?
Thanks
My advice would be to get the OEM parts from the dealership and install them with a torque wrench. I learned the quoted section from scouring gearhead forums and from doing pseudoscientific experiments involving a vise, a hammer, an oscilloscope, and multiple knock sensors.@strantor I'm having the same problem with my knock sensors on a 2001 Chevy Suburban 2500 6.0L vehicle. I bought non-OEM replacement knock sensors and a wiring kit online, took the time to swap the sensors/wiring out and still getting the codes. My automotive guru buddy says to drive it a while and see what happens (cheap option to see). So far it's only been 2 days but keeps throwing the codes after I clear them (attached).
I get the proper resistance on the old sensors and new ones, around 100k each. I'm wondering your thoughts after having gone through this ordeal?? Get OEM sensors and replace the new ones that didn't work? Wait? Other ideas?
I don't have a torque wrench, but could borrow or buy one. Looks like Autozone loans them which I didn't think of when I was happily installing the new ones after cleaning the area out from the old.
How/Where did you learn this:
"5.3L are designed for a 2005 GMC Sierra 5.3L. The generic sensors at autozone a designed to be generic ("fit" as many kinds of vehicles as possible). Just because they FIT doesn't mean they output a signal with the exact amplitude that the 2005 GMC Sierra is looking for. Also, over/under torqueing them affects their output."
Thanks!