I followed the troubleshooting guide posted in my post to diagnose the problem. The pressure switch that goes bad is inside the ecu(black box on the side of the module. It is not the master cylinder pressure sensor.
Look at the PH pressure switch troubleshooting page:
Use an ohm meter to check the resistance across the pins shown. The pressure switch controls the pump. When the pressure is low, it will be 1kohm. When the pressure is high, it will be 0ohm.
When the switch does not work, it will stay 1kohm. That tell the ecu to keep pumping. Then it starts make the screeching sound. If it pumps for more than 5 min, the warning lights and buzzer turns on. For some reason, when it gets cold, the sensor sticks since it spends hours at high pressure when cold. I have seen some improvement if you pump the brakes a few times after you turn off the truck and remove the key. That reduces the pressure and changes the switch to 0ohms.
If you change the brake fluid, you have warmed up the unit. After
Look at the PH pressure switch troubleshooting page:
Use an ohm meter to check the resistance across the pins shown. The pressure switch controls the pump. When the pressure is low, it will be 1kohm. When the pressure is high, it will be 0ohm.
When the switch does not work, it will stay 1kohm. That tell the ecu to keep pumping. Then it starts make the screeching sound. If it pumps for more than 5 min, the warning lights and buzzer turns on. For some reason, when it gets cold, the sensor sticks since it spends hours at high pressure when cold. I have seen some improvement if you pump the brakes a few times after you turn off the truck and remove the key. That reduces the pressure and changes the switch to 0ohms.
If you change the brake fluid, you have warmed up the unit. After