Thought I'd do a new thread since it's a specific error that we see occasionally. Just finished repairing mine this evening, so follow along as I show you how to do it, in case it happens to you.
Saturday morning, loaded truck up to go to the dump (it's a New Hampshire thing). Hopped in, fired it up, was presented with a scary scene of the Check engine (MIL) light on, 4LO light flashing, and TRAC DISABLED on the cluster. "Well, this is new". Looked under the hood, nothing was amiss. Engine seemed to run fine, and I really didn't want this bag of stinky trash in my truck any longer than necessary, so off I went, since it's a short trip. I could tell it was not running right, and the trans would not shift higher than 4th gear. Oh boy, this looks bad.
Got it home, popped in my Carista OBD dongle, opened the app, it reported 1 DTC: P033D Knock Sensor 4, Bank 2. Tried a Reset but it came right back. Turns out that particular DTC causes the engine ECU to fully retard the timing to avoid any pinging, and restricts the tranny to 4th gear so you don't drive it too far. Basically a "limp mode to get you home". I've had this happen before with a different car (Highlander) and it was a mouse had chewed the harness on the engine, repair was almost $800 (it was winter, too cold for me to do it). So I popped off the engine cover and pulled off a couple pieces of that foam stuff (what is that foam for, anyway?), and used a really bright flashlight to look where I could, nothing looked chewed or out of order. Resigned that the intake plenum has to come off to access the sensors.
Instructions in the FSM say to drain the coolant. Yup, coolant passes through the throttle body. I'm sure you don't have to drain it all, but I just opened the radiator drain and let it go while I did some other things (drained out about 1.5 gallons). Took about an hour to get the intake off, not that hard, just be careful not to drop anything. You do NOT need to remove the cover on the cowl as the FSM says. As I lifted the intake off, I found this:
"Well there's your problem right dere!" as the saying goes. This was very fresh, some sort of shredded stuffing that I still haven't figured out where it came from. Got it all the stuffing out, yup wires for the connector to that one knock sensor were chewed clean off.
Tips for getting the intake off: I put one of those Werner painting platforms in front of the truck to stand on, then a thick blanket on top of the radiator so I could kneel up there to reach everything. It's not particularly heavy, just be careful. And did I mention don't drop anything? Especially down those intake runners, be sure to put some tape over them as soon as you get the intake out of the way.
Picked up the parts today, had to pay full price from the local dealer as I didn't want the truck down while waiting on shipping. I also replaced the intake gaskets, and a new PCV valve since it had been about 30K miles since I changed it the last time.
82219-60090 Harness for Knock Sensors, $38.24
17171-0S030 Manifold gasket, $17.25 (need 2)
12204-38010 PCV valve, $15.12
So after I got it all cleaned up, I was wondering "why do they always chew that sensor and none of the others?". Turns out it's 2 issues. First, there's a nice valley right there for a cozy nesting spot, none of the others have room like this. And, the 2 wires from the harness to that connector have no protective loom over them, they are exposed for munching (old vs new below).
So I was determined to make it more difficult for them to do this again. I found some scrap angle strut in my pile, cut off a hunk, and put some screws through it to make it impossible to build a nest in that valley. Spray paint to keep it from rusting.
Link to FSM instructions on removing the intake plenum below. You only need to do up through Step 10.
Saturday morning, loaded truck up to go to the dump (it's a New Hampshire thing). Hopped in, fired it up, was presented with a scary scene of the Check engine (MIL) light on, 4LO light flashing, and TRAC DISABLED on the cluster. "Well, this is new". Looked under the hood, nothing was amiss. Engine seemed to run fine, and I really didn't want this bag of stinky trash in my truck any longer than necessary, so off I went, since it's a short trip. I could tell it was not running right, and the trans would not shift higher than 4th gear. Oh boy, this looks bad.
Got it home, popped in my Carista OBD dongle, opened the app, it reported 1 DTC: P033D Knock Sensor 4, Bank 2. Tried a Reset but it came right back. Turns out that particular DTC causes the engine ECU to fully retard the timing to avoid any pinging, and restricts the tranny to 4th gear so you don't drive it too far. Basically a "limp mode to get you home". I've had this happen before with a different car (Highlander) and it was a mouse had chewed the harness on the engine, repair was almost $800 (it was winter, too cold for me to do it). So I popped off the engine cover and pulled off a couple pieces of that foam stuff (what is that foam for, anyway?), and used a really bright flashlight to look where I could, nothing looked chewed or out of order. Resigned that the intake plenum has to come off to access the sensors.
Instructions in the FSM say to drain the coolant. Yup, coolant passes through the throttle body. I'm sure you don't have to drain it all, but I just opened the radiator drain and let it go while I did some other things (drained out about 1.5 gallons). Took about an hour to get the intake off, not that hard, just be careful not to drop anything. You do NOT need to remove the cover on the cowl as the FSM says. As I lifted the intake off, I found this:
"Well there's your problem right dere!" as the saying goes. This was very fresh, some sort of shredded stuffing that I still haven't figured out where it came from. Got it all the stuffing out, yup wires for the connector to that one knock sensor were chewed clean off.
Tips for getting the intake off: I put one of those Werner painting platforms in front of the truck to stand on, then a thick blanket on top of the radiator so I could kneel up there to reach everything. It's not particularly heavy, just be careful. And did I mention don't drop anything? Especially down those intake runners, be sure to put some tape over them as soon as you get the intake out of the way.
Picked up the parts today, had to pay full price from the local dealer as I didn't want the truck down while waiting on shipping. I also replaced the intake gaskets, and a new PCV valve since it had been about 30K miles since I changed it the last time.
82219-60090 Harness for Knock Sensors, $38.24
17171-0S030 Manifold gasket, $17.25 (need 2)
12204-38010 PCV valve, $15.12
So after I got it all cleaned up, I was wondering "why do they always chew that sensor and none of the others?". Turns out it's 2 issues. First, there's a nice valley right there for a cozy nesting spot, none of the others have room like this. And, the 2 wires from the harness to that connector have no protective loom over them, they are exposed for munching (old vs new below).
So I was determined to make it more difficult for them to do this again. I found some scrap angle strut in my pile, cut off a hunk, and put some screws through it to make it impossible to build a nest in that valley. Spray paint to keep it from rusting.
Link to FSM instructions on removing the intake plenum below. You only need to do up through Step 10.
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