hjdca
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- Jeep Gladiator Rubicon manual Sting Gray
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I had some problems with my Passenger side head intake cam and I learned a lot about these engines. On the intake cam only, At low lift, there are rollers that ride on two thin cam lobes. At high lift there is one thick cam lobe that rides on the "flat tappet" part of the rocker which is pumped up by oil pressure. There is no "roller rocker" at high lift. The Exhaust cam only has one lift, and it is all on rollers. I had no problem with my exhaust cam. Here is a great video that shows how the intake cam works with low lift and high lift. Watch the dark colored metal in the middle of the rocker - this is where you can see it pump up at high lift and de-pump at low lift and leave the work to the two rollers on the side of the rocker. Watch the first 18 seconds of this video.
There are a few things that can happen to the cams of the head:
1. The wide cam lobe for high lift that is not a roller can wear down the lobe. This happened in my truck. I believe this is mostly a 2020 Gladiator issue on the intake cam on the passenger side. I have not heard of the issue on later gladiators... I am adding pictures of my worn cam below.
2. The bearings in the rollers of the rockers wear out - intake or exhaust - ... This puts slop in the system - if intake cam, it gives you clicking at low rpm ; if on the exhaust cam, you get clicking at all rpm. The exhaust cam rockers have needle bearings in the rollers which was an issue on some JKs, but, not on our Gladiators. All the bearings in the rockers on my passenger side head for both cams were fine. I did not have this problem with my 2020 Gladiator with 68K miles. I actually had no clicking above the normal engine noise.
On my truck, P000A & P0300 meant bank 1 intake cam killed and maybe a dead phaser. All high lift lobes completely destroyed. All rockers destroyed. The OCV looked unclogged. I did not have any abnormal ticking or clicking because, Interestingly, the bearings in the low lift roller part of the rockers were fine. I mean there is no play in the roller part of the intake rockers, nor the roller exhaust rockers. The mating surfaces for the high lift lobes just wore out. The Exhaust cam is fine. I decided to change Bank 1 intake cam, phaser, oil control valve, rockers, & lash adjusters. I also changed the Exhaust cam roller rockers and lash adjusters, but, there was nothing wrong with the ones that were installed. I still do not know what caused this extensive wear. I have changed my oil 18 times, always around 3500 miles, using Pennzoil synthetic 0w20 and Mopar Oil filter... 68K miles.... I bought the JTR Oct. 2019, roughly a 2019 summer build... The truck is running great again. I changed to a different brand of oil and viscosity, but, I really do not think that had anything to do with it... There are thousands and thousands of these motors, and if you have a later Gladiator build, the chances that you have an issue are extremely low.... Here are the sad pictures of my passenger side intake cam and rockers...
One thing I would recommend is to download the JSCAN software and buy a license for your VIN - $30, buy the OBDLink MX+ OBD2 Bluetooth Scanner, buy the security bypass Cable Adaptor Fits for Chrysler 12+8 Programming Cable Connector cable, and you can monitor the live data for misfires and cam misbehavior. Note: you do not need the cable if you already have a Tazer. Here is what my data looked like when I figured out my intake cam was bad.... Misfires all at once, big cam error on the intake cam
There are a few things that can happen to the cams of the head:
1. The wide cam lobe for high lift that is not a roller can wear down the lobe. This happened in my truck. I believe this is mostly a 2020 Gladiator issue on the intake cam on the passenger side. I have not heard of the issue on later gladiators... I am adding pictures of my worn cam below.
2. The bearings in the rollers of the rockers wear out - intake or exhaust - ... This puts slop in the system - if intake cam, it gives you clicking at low rpm ; if on the exhaust cam, you get clicking at all rpm. The exhaust cam rockers have needle bearings in the rollers which was an issue on some JKs, but, not on our Gladiators. All the bearings in the rockers on my passenger side head for both cams were fine. I did not have this problem with my 2020 Gladiator with 68K miles. I actually had no clicking above the normal engine noise.
On my truck, P000A & P0300 meant bank 1 intake cam killed and maybe a dead phaser. All high lift lobes completely destroyed. All rockers destroyed. The OCV looked unclogged. I did not have any abnormal ticking or clicking because, Interestingly, the bearings in the low lift roller part of the rockers were fine. I mean there is no play in the roller part of the intake rockers, nor the roller exhaust rockers. The mating surfaces for the high lift lobes just wore out. The Exhaust cam is fine. I decided to change Bank 1 intake cam, phaser, oil control valve, rockers, & lash adjusters. I also changed the Exhaust cam roller rockers and lash adjusters, but, there was nothing wrong with the ones that were installed. I still do not know what caused this extensive wear. I have changed my oil 18 times, always around 3500 miles, using Pennzoil synthetic 0w20 and Mopar Oil filter... 68K miles.... I bought the JTR Oct. 2019, roughly a 2019 summer build... The truck is running great again. I changed to a different brand of oil and viscosity, but, I really do not think that had anything to do with it... There are thousands and thousands of these motors, and if you have a later Gladiator build, the chances that you have an issue are extremely low.... Here are the sad pictures of my passenger side intake cam and rockers...
One thing I would recommend is to download the JSCAN software and buy a license for your VIN - $30, buy the OBDLink MX+ OBD2 Bluetooth Scanner, buy the security bypass Cable Adaptor Fits for Chrysler 12+8 Programming Cable Connector cable, and you can monitor the live data for misfires and cam misbehavior. Note: you do not need the cable if you already have a Tazer. Here is what my data looked like when I figured out my intake cam was bad.... Misfires all at once, big cam error on the intake cam
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