Bruce F
Junior Member
Totally possible!I'm not sure I'd trust a boneyard BCM. The BCM in the vehicle may not be the correct one or a good one.
Dusty,The symptoms you list are associated with a defective BCM A. scan tool can determine which modules remain on after the rest go into sleep mode, and of course troubleshooting the excessive current draw (should be 50-70 MA.).
Regards,
Dusty
2019 Ram 1500 Billet Silver Laramie Quad Cab 2WD, 5.7 Hemi, 8HP75, 3.21 axle, 33-gallon fuel tank, 18” wheels. Build Date: 3 June 2018. Now at 146503 miles.
Thanks form chiming in with the tips and info.
I am not yet skilled/educated enough to determine how to do this.
My scanner, is a little older SnapOn Solus ultra.
It was purchased new (2006?) several years after this 2003 truck was built, so it may be able to watch the modules?? IDK
Would the modules all go to "sleep" while the scanner is plugged in?? And I was checking stuff??
I do not have TONS of experience with the Dodge trucks, as most of my customers have GMs, Fords, or Med/HD trucks.
This customer has taken the truck and will continue to use it daily (with the 1/2(?) amp draw), until it becomes a problem.
I hadn't had it on a battery charger for three(?) days. It started each day, so the drain hasn't been enough to kill the batteries. I did caution them, if the truck were to sit for a longer period (perhaps a couple weeks without use) they should disconnect the negative terminals from both batteries.
They are ok with this scenario. They did replace the BCM with one from a junkyard, but it still had the same "headlights come on when truck is shut down" symptom.
I'm sure I'll see the truck again. I've worked on a few of their trucks. They've recently (last weekend) purchased a 2016 RAM 2500 4x4 234k miles 6.7(?) from Texas, and have been asking me about some steering "issues". It sounds like from the symptoms it may have a tight u joint in the front axle.
We will see..
I will get back and update this thread with new info when I get any.
I still welcome any feedback from others that have had similar experience or knowledge about tis symptom/repair...
I'm always willing to learn, even after a lifetime of doing this work. Every day is something more to learn.
Thanks,
Bruce F