2000 Challenger with the a 2000 240 EFI.
2nd year owned. Have had an intermittent cold start problem. Sometimes when the key is turned to the "on" position, the lift pump with clack and the the motor would fire and run great. Other times, no lift pump noise, boat would crank but no start. This year, cranks fine, no start at all.
Replaced lift pump and port side temp sensor, no change. I have 12+ volts to all power wires for lift and high pressure fuel pumps but they wont run. Following a Manual, it appears the ECU "grounds" out both electric pumps to make them work, that doesn't appear to be happening in my case. If I ground the negative terminal on the high pressure pump to the battery, both pumps will run and the motor will start, so this eliminates a number of other issues as far as spark, compression and the "mechanical" side of the fuel delivery.
My question is.....is there anything else that tells the ECU to "ground out" the pumps? At this point I'm at a bad ECU, I've checked continuity of the harness to the ECU and its good. I took the ECU out and it looks pretty grungy, I'd not be surprised if its been under water judging by the scum line. Anybody know a decent service near Michigan that checks/repairs marine ECU's? or is there something simple I've missed?
2nd year owned. Have had an intermittent cold start problem. Sometimes when the key is turned to the "on" position, the lift pump with clack and the the motor would fire and run great. Other times, no lift pump noise, boat would crank but no start. This year, cranks fine, no start at all.
Replaced lift pump and port side temp sensor, no change. I have 12+ volts to all power wires for lift and high pressure fuel pumps but they wont run. Following a Manual, it appears the ECU "grounds" out both electric pumps to make them work, that doesn't appear to be happening in my case. If I ground the negative terminal on the high pressure pump to the battery, both pumps will run and the motor will start, so this eliminates a number of other issues as far as spark, compression and the "mechanical" side of the fuel delivery.
My question is.....is there anything else that tells the ECU to "ground out" the pumps? At this point I'm at a bad ECU, I've checked continuity of the harness to the ECU and its good. I took the ECU out and it looks pretty grungy, I'd not be surprised if its been under water judging by the scum line. Anybody know a decent service near Michigan that checks/repairs marine ECU's? or is there something simple I've missed?