Its also a perfect example of a self inflicted wound and goes to show that you have to use your head and pay attention when doing repairs as to not screw something else up in the process. Good stuff Ivan.
An impact can cure any difficult or incorrectly installed item. "It is hard going on". "Well USE the IMPACT!" Good idea. Not enough room for the hammer! Great job again Ivan.
Crank sensor is pretty common on these. So are ICMs. He said cranking cadence sounded normal until he replaced the parts. That's because no spark was occurring due to either a missing trigger or failed ICM. He probably sat the harmonic balancer on end of shaft and slid it up to the key then impacted the hell out of it. There was some pretty good scarring on the balancer. Woodruff keys are kinda soft so a good impact gun wouldn't have a hard time shaving one down if you didn't have things lined up correctly.
Great video. In the days before pressure transducers (I'm old) we used to put a thumb over the compression gauge hose and look at the spark on the spark tester while cranking.
Yessur, or hold open the compression gauge relief valve and watch the needle bounce. Even a balloon or rubber glove over the end of the compression gauge hose might work? There is always a way. Stay gold.
@@robertsmith2956 In this case, the timing light would show it was firing near TDC, since the timing marks on the damper were off 180 degrees from the crank as well. The damper was in sync with the coils. The crank is what was out of sync.
Some people shouldn’t be working on their own vehicles, or anyone else’s for that matter lol love your diag work Ivan. Extremely smart diagnostics mechanic right here!! God bless~
watching you almost every night, I ended up spending my 'yearly corvette budget on a pico 4 channel scope " , lol. thanks again Ivan for the inspiration
Cars may as well be magic to me. The fascination is really just dread in a mask. But you must be Merlin! I learned long ago that if watching a job get done and they make it look so easy that I think "hmm, I could've done that"... then I'm watching a true master and I definitely couldn't have done it!
THis was cool. And shows the importance for a DIY guy to research the job he is doing carefully and thoroughly, so he can be aware of Woodruff keys and their importance.
I love this road trips, just imagine the appreciation you get from people, I do some mechanic myself and I feel pretty good every time I fix a vehicle 😅 great videos man.
That was really neat diagnosis!! That was unreal to see the harmoni balancer being 180 out!! That is weird!! At least it's fixed and the tops you had was spot on! Awesome video! Well done Ivan!
Great diagnostic, Ivan! I didn't think one could smash a Woodruff key in the wrong position!! Hell of an impact driver 🙂 Thankfully, customer could smash it back in the right position.
I'm trying to picture how he changed the seal with the key crushed on the crankshaft. Didn't realize '08 was it for this engine. I laughed when I saw they even sell replacement sleeves for it. Give it that new piston wall smell.......
Called it! As soon as you cranked it I said the crank sensor is off for some reason. In my 37 years doing this, I have never seen a 3.8 jump time. I've done plenty of the harmonic balancers though. They like to degrade the rubber on the pulley and it hammers back and forth like a rod bearing gone bad. Tuned up a 5.4 this morning. Man, I hate those things.
That 3800 V-6 is a good engine; it stands to reason it had an issue like this. A person really has to pay attention to what they are doing. Have a safe trip to Columbus, Ivan. GREAT VIDEO!
Was that engine supercharged? I noticed it had a metal intake manifold. Not all 3800 engines had them. My 99 Buick LeSabre had a plastic intake manifold which was poorly designed. To make a long story short, the manifold melted and allowed coolant to leak into the cylinders. Didn't hydro lock the engine fortunately and I was able to repair it.
@@thx1138guy You could replace the plastic with the aluminum intake. I had the 70K coil crack and blow my ECU. Started engine to warm up while I went to check the mail. Came back to car dead, crank no start. Can't believe what they charge for that little exhaust pipe that connects the two exhaust manifolds, and no gasket on it either.
The PCM had all the correct inputs, I don't believe a cam/crank correlation code will set while cranking, it's been a while since I got that deep into this version of the 3800 so I don't remember if they have a cam sensor, but I believe they do.
You either pay tuition to go to training school, or you pay the price of making mistakes. I actually admire DIY mechanics in a day where many people literally have no idea how their car operates, let alone how to fix it. Knowledge has a price, and this guy now knows much more than he did before. Once again, great diagnostics by Ivan, who didn't even have to look at the improperly installed part, to know the problem and the fix.
Going to school doesn't do anything for you. They teach only the basics. They don't have 100 vehicles for you to work on. I should know. I went to school. You can call me an un-educated technician. It looks me years and years of working on vehicles for me to be good at my job. Then the modern crap came along and threw in a monkey wrench. So, I bought programs for my PC to read codes. I still didn't know crap. I bought books for codes. I'm not a Technician by any means. Now comes along utube. People like Mr. O, Ivan here, and many others. I'm okay with what I know. But I still will never be a So Called Technician.
I seriously doubt any other technician would have figured this out. I am an old man and when I used to work on cars there were no computerized anything. One of the most important trouble-shooting tasks was to find out if anyone worked on the car before it came to us. You would not believe how many times we found errors done by someone else. The most common was having the plug wires misplaced, distributor installed 180 degrees off and broken ignition parts that were mishandled during installation such as spark plugs or distributor components. If a car was running fine but just stopped working, the diagnosis was relatively easy but if someone worked on the car and now it doesn't work right, that is a whole different thing.
Yea, I called a mechanic when I gave up. Turns out the manual was wrong on firing order. Had I pulled the distributor cap, and looked at the pistons it would have been obvious. Took him 5 minutes. Guess he saw a lot of them put on according to the repair manual.
I put a used engine in a Ford escape 4 cylinder turbo last week. I reversed the injector connectors so it was firing at the wrong time with the direct injection. What a pain that was to figure out😢 car came in with the engine locked up, so I had no baseline. Then had communication codes so I was chasing that
the ole "woodruff keys dont matter" LoL. The injector pump on the 1980's Mack 6 cylinder engine is dead set easy to reattach to an engine and have spot on timing, there is a dummy double tooth on it. I know of an apprentice mechanic at a Mack workshop who did not know, just put the pump and did up the bolts and smooshed the spline on. Engine would not run, and its timing was way off when spill timed out the No1 injector port. Great diagnosis Ian, your information display on the scope really nailed it. Remarkable that the pulley was put on exactly 180 degrees out.
Being out 180 degrees of timing is sure different toady. A friend and I were putting a distributor in a 1969 Dodge van with a 318. Unveknownst to us we put the thing in 180 off. While I'm looking at the engine from the top of the doghouse, my friend cranks it. A flame shot out through the top of the carburetor and singed off my eyebrows.
Ivan always makes mechanic stuff look easy. There are a lot of people who work on vehicles that are supposedly a certified mechanic, but the truth is that we pay for their true lack of being very good with electronics. I always like to watch him make it look easier than it is for 99+% of us
Ivan calls it again! Great video and nice diagnosis. The ole 97 Buick Century is still going! Its a great car and thank you for giving me the opportunity to buy it once again!
I added a PHAD pressure transducer to my arsenal years ago. I bought the 1st gen if I remember correct. Works great with my scope. Once you learn how to use it and read the data. You diagnostic time is cut in half and spot on. Great video Ivan show the power of a scope and right attachments.
Quite besides your usual excellent diagnostics - the first thing you discussed was "cadence" of the starter - logic being, if the load remains constant - so should the crank sound. The data reminded me of the episode involving an old mate that would run up his Lotus Elite hillclimb prepared car while it was garagebound and up on blocks ( yes, blocks back then - jacks had screws) so, another mate arrived and the familiar scream pierce our ears - abruptly ended by muted WHOOPH! To me it was everything I predicted being true but the others rather regarded me as a prophet of doom that had brought out the gremlins. However: I saw the crank pulleys counterrotate before stopping! A quick hook up to your kit would've settled the issue in an hour but things dragged on for several weeks until the engine was out and dismantled - crankshaft neatly severed. Great work Ivan - I still say you sell your services cheap!
The owner doesn't remember the woodruff key???? OMG. Of course, even the best of us can screw up if we work when we are tired. I recall the mini series where Eric O did not tighten the harmonic balancer, and the maniacal German Engineeres relied on torque only to keep the HB in place. NO KEY. Insane way to time a crankshaft to the cams. And Eric O. Is one of the very best I've ever seen.
Great work Ivan, i guess i'm old school. Using normal tools you can tell if the resistance is off by feel as it tightens. This new generation loves that impact gun. (Send it) lol
My wife had a 1986 Buick LeSabre Front Wheel Drive with the 3.8L V6 and I remember that sensor having an intermittent problem. One new GM sensor, one new GM connector assembly, some rerouting of the 3 wires and it was off and running. The original wiring harness and the connector were so tight and pulled on the crank sensor, that it caused intermittent stalling especially while driving. I put the new connector in, keeping the wiring away from the crank pulley and the serpentine belt. It all worked.
You're the best Ivan! I think it would be wise for people, before they start part-swapping, is to purchase a decent scanner, and it would at least you would have an idea. Parts-swapping would pay for the scanner in time. Of course, you would have to spend some time learning how to use it and what the data means.
Hi Ivan nice work with the scope again it shows the problem so quickly and a little thinking about the previous work and you are bang on again. Just a side note if you disable the ignitor then crank it you would hear the change in cranking rithem or as i call it the heart beat.
I channelled Ivan the other week, a van at work came in with limp mode and egr flow codes - some aftermarket maf had been put on it and a genuine EGR actuator had been fitted. Turns out the air flow meter was the wrong type and output a square wave signal and not a sine wave like earlier vehicles.
Given the age of that vehicle, those parts replaced were all due to give up the ghost anyway, so no wasted efforts in firing the parts cannon. Great work diagnosing the strange symptoms Ivan!
A few videos back. I told you about GM 3800 3.8L on the older ones. They had a magnetic that would fall off the timing gear an cause timing problems. They would still run but in limp mode.
These 3.8 engines were in many GM Holden Commodores here in Australia. When you showed that the timing was 180 degrees out, straight away I knew it had to be the balancer because of where the crank sensor is located and cannot be installed 180 degrees out.
My off the cuff thought was crankshaft position sensor due to the same problem on my Ranger. I don't have the array of tools, and would have parts cannon CPK first/again. Hopefully I would notice a key slot putting it on, but who knows jammed down the side of a 3.8 shoved in a FWD platform. BTW the Ranger CPK changes with a single socket, not even needing to jack the vehicle up.
At least it wasn't like the Harmonic Dampner on my 2015 Ford Cmax. It DOESN'T HAVE A DAMN KEY!!! They literally expect you to buy a special tool kit just to time the motor properly. But they didn't meet my MacGyver ass. I lined up the wide spot on the dampner to a bolt boss on the timing cover (also had to replace that and the seal due to an accident). I installed the new dampner and thought I had the timing off. Wouldn't start. but for 1 second then die and had a code for the timing not matching up to the camshaft. I didn't realize the crank position sensor could go EITHER WAY on the spot it mounted in. I decided to turn the sensor around the other way and try it. Vroom! Car started right up. Apparently I was close enough with my line up job that it started and ran just like it used to! Yay! I wish I had made a RUclips video of it because NO ONE has a timing job for a Ford Focuse/Escape/Cmax/Edge online at all. They are all the same motor minus the lack of mechanical water pump / belts on my Hybrid. The 2.0, 2.3, and EcoBoost variants are all based off the same motor. I even straightened the pins on the electric water pump and got the plug to go back on because it's like $350 from Ford. I covered the connection in Hip tape (from my job usually used for plastic they install) and it's been fine ever since. I also had to replace the oil filter mount which THANK GOD is a separate piece on the motor because the accident also took out the center part that the filter screwed on to. That was only $22 from Ford surprise surprise.
@14:07 the old school method is a timing light. Find TDC cylinder 1, Mark the balancer with a line that goes from TDC to about 3/4" back before TDC, connect timing light, crank engine. If the light doesn't light somewhere near tdc then you know what you need to know to call a timing issue. Just because you don't need a timing light to set timing on this car doesn't mean it isn't a useful tool.
@@PineHollowAutoDiagnostics You have to pull a plug to find TDC to mark it anyways. So no savings. Can't wait till Ivan has to many transducers and sells one cheap. LOL
The tools would probably be needed if you weren't aware that the customer replaced the crank angle sensor but I could take an educated guess if that sensor had been replaced that the ignition timing may be off. That pulley was fitted right from the 3.8 litre Buick LN3 V6 engine which was first fitted into the Holden VN Commodore in 1988 in Australia then the last of the Buick V6 engines was the L36 engine which was fitted into the Holden VY series 2 Commodores in 2004 which used the same harmonic balancer. My dads 2000 model Holden VX Commodore runs the 2004 engine because the original L36 V6 engine suffered from exhaust valve seat recession due to LP gas use,he thought that it would be cheaper & easier to replace the engine, apparently it's not. The LN3 V6 engine went through crankshaft position sensors for some reason because we had one replaced in my aunties old Holden VN Commodore wagon which she swapped my dads old van for because she traded it in to buy my grandmother a new car. We went through an ignition coil pack because my brother kept driving it with bad ignition leads so both the motherboard & ignition coils needed replacing, they're an integrated unit on the LN3 V6 engine The best upgrade is the L27/L67/L36 ignition coil assembly because you only have to place one of 3 coils when they go,I replaced coil number 2-5 in my dads car when cylinder number 2 lost spark,he had an L27 V6 engine sitting in his shed which used the same coils so I robbed that engine of that coil for the L36 V6 engine !
I owned an Australian GM-H vehicle which had an inline 3.8 buick engine & the harmonic balancer ended up with the rubber inside going faulty,When I took it off it had the key way built into the crank so there was no way you could replace it the wrong way.All I can say is double check your work when replacing those type of parts (take photos). Cheers Ivan ,By the way that was one of the best GM engines ever made.
"owned an Australian GM-H vehicle which had an inline 3.8 buick engine" No you didn't. Every Buick 3800 V-6 engine was, I kid you not, a Vee engine, not inline in any way whatsover. I'm sure you know that.
@@LesReeves Never ever heard longitudinal north south engine orientation called inline before. By that definition, Subies are inline engines, not boxers. Just saying.
@@BillMalcolm-tn3kq It was what we called all engines here(as inline six )& four cylinders up until the early seventies when transverse engine vehicles started being imported from Japan.Until then the Morris Mini was what we called an east-west engines.
@@LesReeves Yes, we called BLMC crud like MInis, 1100s and Land Crabs east west engines in Canada as well in the '60s. My father purchased to his undying regret, an early Land Crab. Nevertheless, once the term transverse came into use, which wasn't till the '80s (name me a front-wheel drive '70s Japanese car besides Subaru that was exported before the Toyota Tercel Terminal Rust bucket with a copy of the Triumph 1300 layout came along late in the decade), north south for engine orientation, plus longitudinal, has been the norm. So, if you're trying to convince me that Aussies walk around in a haze calling north south or longitudinal engine placement inline, please understand I do not believe you. At all. Begone with silly excuses.
Yea the o scope was the deal but knowing how the ignition system works is the whole route to diag here, if you were under the thinking that it was controlled by coil pack ecm signal or whatever not knowing the cps was getting the timing from the balancer than youd been running circles..
Its also a perfect example of a self inflicted wound and goes to show that you have to use your head and pay attention when doing repairs as to not screw something else up in the process. Good stuff Ivan.
Yep! Helps having a service manual of some sort,too..
@@Runco990 This guy did his own maintenance too and fcuked it up.,
@@Dytopjewa7631 The Chilton for this car is one of the most disappointing ones I have for my cars.
@@robertsmith2956 some info,is better than no info 🤷🏽♂️
Work on it, it no longer works, 99% chance it’s something you did
An impact can cure any difficult or incorrectly installed item. "It is hard going on". "Well USE the IMPACT!" Good idea. Not enough room for the hammer! Great job again Ivan.
I'm surprised he was able to even able to get it on in the first place. Self inflicted. Impressive diagnosis! Thanks Ivan!
Is it possible the key was already sheared in half? Maybe that's why it stopped in the first place?
@@helgew9008 good catch. I doubt he would have gotten it on 180 out with a fully intact key. At least without breaking his tools
I agree the key must of been sheared in half already
Crank sensor is pretty common on these. So are ICMs. He said cranking cadence sounded normal until he replaced the parts. That's because no spark was occurring due to either a missing trigger or failed ICM. He probably sat the harmonic balancer on end of shaft and slid it up to the key then impacted the hell out of it. There was some pretty good scarring on the balancer. Woodruff keys are kinda soft so a good impact gun wouldn't have a hard time shaving one down if you didn't have things lined up correctly.
A PHAD video always makes the day a great day
I couldn’t agree more
No fluff, no noise, no "glamour" or "hey look at me", just good old fashioned information. The way a repair video should be.
@@adotintheshark4848 ABSOLUTELY
I completely fail how any normal person could install the keyed Harmonic balancer improperly. People never cease to amaze us all.
Pull the plugs, probably have at least 3 cyl that are stripped also. 2-4-6 ☺ God I hate those back plugs.
That is pretty bad. 😂 maybe he was liquored up.
Having a Pico scope and knowing how to use it is a game changer .❤
Great video.
In the days before pressure transducers (I'm old) we used to put a thumb over the compression gauge hose and look at the spark on the spark tester while cranking.
Yessur, or hold open the compression gauge relief valve and watch the needle bounce. Even a balloon or rubber glove over the end of the compression gauge hose might work? There is always a way.
Stay gold.
We also had a timing mark for TDC. Flashing light gave us all that good info. One crank tells you timing is off.
@@robertsmith2956 In this case, the timing light would show it was firing near TDC, since the timing marks on the damper were off 180 degrees from the crank as well. The damper was in sync with the coils. The crank is what was out of sync.
Knowledge is power
And power is Key!
I have a shirt that says that, so it must be true.
Some people shouldn’t be working on their own vehicles, or anyone else’s for that matter lol love your diag work Ivan. Extremely smart diagnostics mechanic right here!!
God bless~
watching you almost every night, I ended up spending my 'yearly corvette budget on a pico 4 channel scope " , lol. thanks again Ivan for the inspiration
The right man with the right tools. Nice work Ivan.
Sometimes we are our worst enemy !.....your one of the best in the bizz ivan !! ....work safe. God bless u
That is a perfect example of why it is imperative that a mobile mechanic has the equipment and has the knowledge and experience to use it.
As a former diagnostic specialist, I enjoy watching your content!
Cars may as well be magic to me. The fascination is really just dread in a mask. But you must be Merlin! I learned long ago that if watching a job get done and they make it look so easy that I think "hmm, I could've done that"... then I'm watching a true master and I definitely couldn't have done it!
THis was cool. And shows the importance for a DIY guy to research the job he is doing carefully and thoroughly, so he can be aware of Woodruff keys and their importance.
That was a good example of why it isn't always a good idea to use an impact wrench to start tightening bolts, or to tighten the jaws on a lathe chuck.
Who ever used an impact driver on a lathe chuck ? if you know crazy people, show us !!
@@CrimeVid If it's even Remotely possible, it's been done! 😝
Kind of, you can turn down the torque on an impact if you just want to run a fastener down without trying to send it to Jebus.
Very impressive call, Ivan. Once again, data doesn't lie. I really miss those 3.8's.
I love this road trips, just imagine the appreciation you get from people, I do some mechanic myself and I feel pretty good every time I fix a vehicle 😅 great videos man.
That was really neat diagnosis!! That was unreal to see the harmoni balancer being 180 out!! That is weird!! At least it's fixed and the tops you had was spot on! Awesome video! Well done Ivan!
I have never come across another person , that skilled in diagnostic as you Ivan. I want be like you when i grow up.😂
Great diagnostic, Ivan! I didn't think one could smash a Woodruff key in the wrong position!! Hell of an impact driver 🙂 Thankfully, customer could smash it back in the right position.
I'm trying to picture how he changed the seal with the key crushed on the crankshaft.
Didn't realize '08 was it for this engine. I laughed when I saw they even sell replacement sleeves for it. Give it that new piston wall smell.......
@@robertsmith2956 Yeah 🙂
Hulk smash!!
@@0tt0z LOL
I have watched you for years , and learned so much , thank you for always teaching us
Called it! As soon as you cranked it I said the crank sensor is off for some reason. In my 37 years doing this, I have never seen a 3.8 jump time. I've done plenty of the harmonic balancers though. They like to degrade the rubber on the pulley and it hammers back and forth like a rod bearing gone bad. Tuned up a 5.4 this morning. Man, I hate those things.
Tuned- as in prepare for the carnage? Puke a plug or lose a chain.
Great job again, Ivan Dan from NJ 2005 gmc broken coil wire ground truck now lives in florida
That's the first 3.8L I've seen that has no leaks! Great diag, thanks for sharing!
Only 40K. Give it another 40K, and water will find a way. Dealer no longer carries the water pump bolts.
Series 3 are quite refined. Series 2 is a dumpster fire with everything bolted to it
@@robertsmith2956 BS OH AND NEW WATER PUMP $ 28.00
That 3800 V-6 is a good engine; it stands to reason it had an issue like this. A person really has to pay attention to what they are doing. Have a safe trip to Columbus, Ivan. GREAT VIDEO!
Was that engine supercharged? I noticed it had a metal intake manifold. Not all 3800 engines had them. My 99 Buick LeSabre had a plastic intake manifold which was poorly designed. To make a long story short, the manifold melted and allowed coolant to leak into the cylinders. Didn't hydro lock the engine fortunately and I was able to repair it.
@@thx1138guy the series 3 04-08 went back to aluminum upper intake manifold
@@thx1138guy You could replace the plastic with the aluminum intake. I had the 70K coil crack and blow my ECU. Started engine to warm up while I went to check the mail. Came back to car dead, crank no start. Can't believe what they charge for that little exhaust pipe that connects the two exhaust manifolds, and no gasket on it either.
I have had 3 plastic intake manifolds on my Grand Marquis which led to a class-action lawsuit against Ford.
"If you aren't testing, you're guessing" or firing the parts cannon. Excellent skills and was done in 1 hour - wow.
You were correct about the nearly 180 degree difference. Great diagnosis, happy owner once more. THANKS for the video!
No DTC's! Amazing. Thanks Ivan!
The PCM had all the correct inputs, I don't believe a cam/crank correlation code will set while cranking, it's been a while since I got that deep into this version of the 3800 so I don't remember if they have a cam sensor, but I believe they do.
You are such a pro by not raking this guy over and saying really bad things about him for doing something that was so totally unprofessional.Good job
You either pay tuition to go to training school, or you pay the price of making mistakes. I actually admire DIY mechanics in a day where many people literally have no idea how their car operates, let alone how to fix it. Knowledge has a price, and this guy now knows much more than he did before. Once again, great diagnostics by Ivan, who didn't even have to look at the improperly installed part, to know the problem and the fix.
Going to school doesn't do anything for you.
They teach only the basics.
They don't have 100 vehicles for you to work on.
I should know. I went to school. You can call me an un-educated technician.
It looks me years and years of working on vehicles for me to be good at my job. Then the modern crap came along and threw in a monkey wrench.
So, I bought programs for my PC to read codes. I still didn't know crap. I bought books for codes.
I'm not a Technician by any means.
Now comes along utube. People like Mr. O, Ivan here, and many others. I'm okay with what I know.
But I still will never be a So Called Technician.
I seriously doubt any other technician would have figured this out. I am an old man and when I used to work on cars there were no computerized anything. One of the most important trouble-shooting tasks was to find out if anyone worked on the car before it came to us. You would not believe how many times we found errors done by someone else. The most common was having the plug wires misplaced, distributor installed 180 degrees off and broken ignition parts that were mishandled during installation such as spark plugs or distributor components. If a car was running fine but just stopped working, the diagnosis was relatively easy but if someone worked on the car and now it doesn't work right, that is a whole different thing.
Yea, I called a mechanic when I gave up. Turns out the manual was wrong on firing order. Had I pulled the distributor cap, and looked at the pistons it would have been obvious.
Took him 5 minutes. Guess he saw a lot of them put on according to the repair manual.
Hats off to Ivan no doubt, but the signs of bad timing were all in the sound of the crank.
I put a used engine in a Ford escape 4 cylinder turbo last week. I reversed the injector connectors so it was firing at the wrong time with the direct injection. What a pain that was to figure out😢 car came in with the engine locked up, so I had no baseline. Then had communication codes so I was chasing that
Good technicians, yes. Part changers.,.nope.
That was great diagnostics! I am impressed.
the ole "woodruff keys dont matter" LoL. The injector pump on the 1980's Mack 6 cylinder engine is dead set easy to reattach to an engine and have spot on timing, there is a dummy double tooth on it. I know of an apprentice mechanic at a Mack workshop who did not know, just put the pump and did up the bolts and smooshed the spline on. Engine would not run, and its timing was way off when spill timed out the No1 injector port. Great diagnosis Ian, your information display on the scope really nailed it. Remarkable that the pulley was put on exactly 180 degrees out.
Great video! It's always harder to fix after someone else has been into it.
Thank you sir sharing issues with all repairs. Knowledge you sharing with public beautiful. Love your videos
IVAN, YOU ALWAYS ROCK IN MY BOOK WHAT AN AWESOME DIAGNOSTICS APPROACH THANKS FOR SHARING UR KNOWLEDGE ALWAYS LEARNING FROM THE BEST CHEEEEERS.
Being out 180 degrees of timing is sure different toady. A friend and I were putting a distributor in a 1969 Dodge van with a 318. Unveknownst to us we put the thing in 180 off. While I'm looking at the engine from the top of the doghouse, my friend cranks it. A flame shot out through the top of the carburetor and singed off my eyebrows.
My first FI engine, I was putting my hand over the throttle body to prime. Thought my arm was going to be sucked into the 5L engine.
A picture is worth ... getting it right ! nice diagnostics
Ivan always makes mechanic stuff look easy. There are a lot of people who work on vehicles that are supposedly a certified mechanic, but the truth is that we pay for their true lack of being very good with electronics. I always like to watch him make it look easier than it is for 99+% of us
Classic demo of your mantra! Nicely done.
Well done. And despite the abuse, bet that engines run for another ten years. All the best.
Your awesome Ivan I learn so much from you. Thank you for making these videos you help a lot of people
Ivan calls it again! Great video and nice diagnosis. The ole 97 Buick Century is still going! Its a great car and thank you for giving me the opportunity to buy it once again!
This is my fix for the day! Thank you for your professionally knowledge and your video.
I added a PHAD pressure transducer to my arsenal years ago. I bought the 1st gen if I remember correct. Works great with my scope. Once you learn how to use it and read the data. You diagnostic time is cut in half and spot on. Great video Ivan show the power of a scope and right attachments.
Great episode as always. You sir are in the super hero status.
I could sense right away that it was owner error. But the harmonic balancer? Didn't even know it was possible to install it wrong. 😆 Great video.
Quite besides your usual excellent diagnostics - the first thing you discussed was "cadence" of the starter - logic being, if the load remains constant - so should the crank sound.
The data reminded me of the episode involving an old mate that would run up his Lotus Elite hillclimb prepared car while it was garagebound and up on blocks ( yes, blocks back then - jacks had screws) so, another mate arrived and the familiar scream pierce our ears - abruptly ended by muted WHOOPH! To me it was everything I predicted being true but the others rather regarded me as a prophet of doom that had brought out the gremlins. However: I saw the crank pulleys counterrotate before stopping! A quick hook up to your kit would've settled the issue in an hour but things dragged on for several weeks until the engine was out and dismantled - crankshaft neatly severed.
Great work Ivan - I still say you sell your services cheap!
Ivan, a very good diagnosis. Hope your enjoying your road trip as much as we're enjoying your work. Thanks for Sharing!🙃🙂
Hellava Diag. Spot on with the right tools and knowledge. Without the owners testimony, you’d were correct either way 👍👍👍
That's incredible looking at that pic of harmonic balancer not even sure how he was able to install that completely 😮
"woodruff key" lol, I learn something new in every phad video. Grandmaster level diags here!
amazing diag. from a great technician, thanks for posting
Ivan you’re the best! Love your videos and you’re knowledge, you are very intelligent person!
Awesome diagnosis, straight to the point.
The owner doesn't remember the woodruff key???? OMG. Of course, even the best of us can screw up if we work when we are tired. I recall the mini series where Eric O did not tighten the harmonic balancer, and the maniacal German Engineeres relied on torque only to keep the HB in place. NO KEY. Insane way to time a crankshaft to the cams. And Eric O. Is one of the very best I've ever seen.
Great work Ivan, i guess i'm old school. Using normal tools you can tell if the resistance is off by feel as it tightens. This new generation loves that impact gun. (Send it) lol
My wife had a 1986 Buick LeSabre Front Wheel Drive with the 3.8L V6 and I remember that sensor having an intermittent problem. One new GM sensor, one new GM connector assembly, some rerouting of the 3 wires and it was off and running. The original wiring harness and the connector were so tight and pulled on the crank sensor, that it caused intermittent stalling especially while driving. I put the new connector in, keeping the wiring away from the crank pulley and the serpentine belt. It all worked.
outstanding diagnostic path!
You're the best Ivan! I think it would be wise for people, before they start part-swapping, is to purchase a decent scanner, and it would at least you would have an idea. Parts-swapping would pay for the scanner in time. Of course, you would have to spend some time learning how to use it and what the data means.
Great Video, Great Mechanic !
Wow!. Took a lot of work to get that balancer on like that. Just wow.
Brilliant, and yes, Logic is key.....
Hi Ivan nice work with the scope again it shows the problem so quickly and a little thinking about the previous work and you are bang on again. Just a side note if you disable the ignitor then crank it you would hear the change in cranking rithem or as i call it the heart beat.
Great call!! Definitely a job for the Pico!
Splendid diagnostic ! Follow the data in Automotive repair ! 🎯
Thanks for the great video. I always walk away with a lil more knowledge, thanks to you
Really nice work! That is why I watch.
Bravo ! Graphic speaks.
Nice clean older Buick!
Wow Ivan! Incredible video, I need to study again those "oldies" ignition systems! Thank you!
Scanner Dan does great explaining the old systems.
I channelled Ivan the other week, a van at work came in with limp mode and egr flow codes - some aftermarket maf had been put on it and a genuine EGR actuator had been fitted. Turns out the air flow meter was the wrong type and output a square wave signal and not a sine wave like earlier vehicles.
Given the age of that vehicle, those parts replaced were all due to give up the ghost anyway, so no wasted efforts in firing the parts cannon. Great work diagnosing the strange symptoms Ivan!
The 3.8 is one of the best v6's ever made ! My 2002 lasabre was good for 32 mpg highway all day long !
A few videos back. I told you about GM 3800 3.8L on the older ones. They had a magnetic that would fall off the timing gear an cause timing problems. They would still run but in limp mode.
I have a video on that...'91 Park Ave from 3 years ago :)
Science, not opinion. Great diag
another wondefully done job
Nice diagnosis and another win for the scope. Now you just have to know how to read those squiggly lines on the screen. 🤣🤣
Common sense Ivan. You rock.
Great video Ivan can't wait till the next one
Excellent Ivan
Kinda like the flywheel on a Briggs and Stratton!
What I was thinking is: Start your DIY journey with lawnmower engines. It's cheaper that way.
That was a smart move to look on rock auto how that specific harmonic balancer looks like for that model.
These 3.8 engines were in many GM Holden Commodores here in Australia. When you showed that the timing was 180 degrees out, straight away I knew it had to be the balancer because of where the crank sensor is located and cannot be installed 180 degrees out.
My off the cuff thought was crankshaft position sensor due to the same problem on my Ranger. I don't have the array of tools, and would have parts cannon CPK first/again. Hopefully I would notice a key slot putting it on, but who knows jammed down the side of a 3.8 shoved in a FWD platform. BTW the Ranger CPK changes with a single socket, not even needing to jack the vehicle up.
Nice call, Ivan!
One thing we know for sure, the guy has a really powerful impact wrench.
Excellent diag.
Ivan for the win!
At least it wasn't like the Harmonic Dampner on my 2015 Ford Cmax. It DOESN'T HAVE A DAMN KEY!!! They literally expect you to buy a special tool kit just to time the motor properly. But they didn't meet my MacGyver ass. I lined up the wide spot on the dampner to a bolt boss on the timing cover (also had to replace that and the seal due to an accident). I installed the new dampner and thought I had the timing off. Wouldn't start. but for 1 second then die and had a code for the timing not matching up to the camshaft. I didn't realize the crank position sensor could go EITHER WAY on the spot it mounted in. I decided to turn the sensor around the other way and try it. Vroom! Car started right up. Apparently I was close enough with my line up job that it started and ran just like it used to! Yay! I wish I had made a RUclips video of it because NO ONE has a timing job for a Ford Focuse/Escape/Cmax/Edge online at all. They are all the same motor minus the lack of mechanical water pump / belts on my Hybrid. The 2.0, 2.3, and EcoBoost variants are all based off the same motor. I even straightened the pins on the electric water pump and got the plug to go back on because it's like $350 from Ford. I covered the connection in Hip tape (from my job usually used for plastic they install) and it's been fine ever since. I also had to replace the oil filter mount which THANK GOD is a separate piece on the motor because the accident also took out the center part that the filter screwed on to. That was only $22 from Ford surprise surprise.
@14:07 the old school method is a timing light. Find TDC cylinder 1, Mark the balancer with a line that goes from TDC to about 3/4" back before TDC, connect timing light, crank engine. If the light doesn't light somewhere near tdc then you know what you need to know to call a timing issue. Just because you don't need a timing light to set timing on this car doesn't mean it isn't a useful tool.
That would work in a pinch! But so much easier just to pull one spark plug and let the scope draw some squiggles 😁
@@PineHollowAutoDiagnostics You have to pull a plug to find TDC to mark it anyways. So no savings.
Can't wait till Ivan has to many transducers and sells one cheap. LOL
The 3800 V6 was notorious for balancer problems. Had one myself.
Good job as always Ivan
Thank you so much
The tools would probably be needed if you weren't aware that the customer replaced the crank angle sensor but I could take an educated guess if that sensor had been replaced that the ignition timing may be off.
That pulley was fitted right from the 3.8 litre Buick LN3 V6 engine which was first fitted into the Holden VN Commodore in 1988 in Australia then the last of the Buick V6 engines was the L36 engine which was fitted into the Holden VY series 2 Commodores in 2004 which used the same harmonic balancer.
My dads 2000 model Holden VX Commodore runs the 2004 engine because the original L36 V6 engine suffered from exhaust valve seat recession due to LP gas use,he thought that it would be cheaper & easier to replace the engine, apparently it's not.
The LN3 V6 engine went through crankshaft position sensors for some reason because we had one replaced in my aunties old Holden VN Commodore wagon which she swapped my dads old van for because she traded it in to buy my grandmother a new car.
We went through an ignition coil pack because my brother kept driving it with bad ignition leads so both the motherboard & ignition coils needed replacing, they're an integrated unit on the LN3 V6 engine
The best upgrade is the L27/L67/L36 ignition coil assembly because you only have to place one of 3 coils when they go,I replaced coil number 2-5 in my dads car when cylinder number 2 lost spark,he had an L27 V6 engine sitting in his shed which used the same coils so I robbed that engine of that coil for the L36 V6 engine !
The history was important too. If the owner never told you he had it off to change the crank position sensor it would have been a longer diagnosis.
3800 is the best engine ever made. We've owned a lot of them and wish they were still in production.
I owned an Australian GM-H vehicle which had an inline 3.8 buick engine & the harmonic balancer ended up with the rubber inside going faulty,When I took it off it had the key way built into the crank so there was no way you could replace it the wrong way.All I can say is double check your work when replacing those type of parts (take photos). Cheers Ivan ,By the way that was one of the best GM engines ever made.
"owned an Australian GM-H vehicle which had an inline 3.8 buick engine" No you didn't.
Every Buick 3800 V-6 engine was, I kid you not, a Vee engine, not inline in any way whatsover. I'm sure you know that.
@@BillMalcolm-tn3kq My apologies what I should have said that it was an inline V6 not a transverse engine or as some would say north/south placement.
@@LesReeves Never ever heard longitudinal north south engine orientation called inline before. By that definition, Subies are inline engines, not boxers. Just saying.
@@BillMalcolm-tn3kq It was what we called all engines here(as inline six )& four cylinders up until the early seventies when transverse engine vehicles started being imported from Japan.Until then the Morris Mini was what we called an east-west engines.
@@LesReeves Yes, we called BLMC crud like MInis, 1100s and Land Crabs east west engines in Canada as well in the '60s. My father purchased to his undying regret, an early Land Crab.
Nevertheless, once the term transverse came into use, which wasn't till the '80s (name me a front-wheel drive '70s Japanese car besides Subaru that was exported before the Toyota Tercel Terminal Rust bucket with a copy of the Triumph 1300 layout came along late in the decade), north south for engine orientation, plus longitudinal, has been the norm. So, if you're trying to convince me that Aussies walk around in a haze calling north south or longitudinal engine placement inline, please understand I do not believe you. At all. Begone with silly excuses.
Yea the o scope was the deal but knowing how the ignition system works is the whole route to diag here, if you were under the thinking that it was controlled by coil pack ecm signal or whatever not knowing the cps was getting the timing from the balancer than youd been running circles..