Gladiator Brad 704
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2019
- Threads
- 32
- Messages
- 246
- Reaction score
- 132
- Location
- Mooresville NC
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Gladiator Rubicon
- Thread starter
- #16
Codes the dealer resd are: B156D-00, UO485-00
Sponsored
The bed lights do come on and off as they should. The insturment cluster was replaced under warranty about 6 months ago. It went totaly black. I seldom use the fog lights and probbly havent used them since the replacement of the cluster. I am sure in the past the engine light did not come on with the previous cluster. I do not get the light symbol posted by TestMule.
I will get the code read asap.
As a guy who used to travel around my company for 20 years performing Root Cause Analysis on machine failures, I totally subscribe to a principle known as Occam's Razor (essentially, the simplest solution is usually the best).I'm now also doubting there will be a code. Seems like something went wrong with the cluster replacement. I'd be interested to know if a DTC would cause the bed lights indicator to go on ?
I can’t even guess how to get the dealership to think like me; however, every time I have been to a dealership in 40+ years of car ownership, even the crappy service teams ask me "what seems to be the problem?" Just take it in and tell them "Hey, you guys replaced my instrument cluster on "X date" and now these things happen." Then show them the CEL when the bed light is turned on and the CEL when the door gets opened. You're actually in a better place than many others are with the issues they have because they can't "reproduce" the symptoms when they bring the vehicle in.I forgot to mention, when I open the door the check engine light also comes on. Running or not. In drive or park.
How can I comunicate with the service tech. at the dealership? I don't want them tearing my truck apart looking for chafed wires that are not there. I think they should start with another cluster replacement, ( it took almost 5 months to get the first replacement cluster ). Do you think they will eaven have a clue as to what Occam's Razor is? I do not. They have always totaly disreguarded anything I have to say.... Looking foward to your advice.
The thing with warranty work is neither you nor them get to really choose what steps to take. You do your best to show them the problem, maybe nudge a little bit, but then you need to leave them to their work. They investigate the issue and then follow procedures for additional troubleshooting and testing. If they want to verify the integrity of the vehicle harnesses, why stop them? Who knows, there might actually be a problem there. It's usually counter-productive to try and restrict troubleshooting.I forgot to mention, when I open the door the check engine light also comes on. Running or not. In drive or park.
How can I comunicate with the service tech. at the dealership? I don't want them tearing my truck apart looking for chafed wires that are not there. I think they should start with another cluster replacement, ( it took almost 5 months to get the first replacement cluster ). Do you think they will eaven have a clue as to what Occam's Razor is? I do not. They have always totaly disreguarded anything I have to say. I used my free oil changes with much trepidation. The oil changes included a free tire rotation. When I started changing my own oil and rotating the tires myself I found the lug nuts to be severly over toqured. I had to use a 4' breaker bar that I have for my tractor to get some of them off. If I had been on the side of the road I would have been out of luck. Looking foward to your advice.
Right, but you said those were the two codes that were read. I was only arming you with information related to those two codes. Ultimately, you have two codes related to items in the dash and wonky lights in the dash and the dash was recently worked on. That’s not coincidental.…but I have had no problem with my radio…
That is because the bed lights normally come on as part of the door open lighting schemeI forgot to mention, when I open the door the check engine light also comes on. Running or not. In drive or park.
I think the radio codes are a red herring then. They would not normally drive a check engine light and are a latent code statusing the radio module.With F97 fuse out, situation still exist.
For me, I simplify it to "what changed" when troubleshooting. If there was no human interaction then much more simple troubleshooting techniques can be applied.As a guy who used to travel around my company for 20 years performing Root Cause Analysis on machine failures, I totally subscribe to a principle known as Occam's Razor (essentially, the simplest solution is usually the best).
The first two questions I would ask the teams I was working with were 1) when was the last time it was known to be working correctly and 2) what maintenance was done between that time and the failure.
Personally, I think you have told us what is wrong...the instrument cluster replacement. If the CEL comes on when you turn the bed lights on but the bed light indicator does not, I would wager that the wiring for the the two lights is switched around. I don't know if that is one harness plug that may have pins incorrectly wired or if there are separate wires to each light (I'm sure someone here will know) but that is honestly where I would start my diagnosis.
I mean, turn bed lights on, CEL light comes on; turn them off, CEL goes off. No codes indicating engine issue. Sounds like somehow the bed light indicator got crossed with the CEL during the instrument cluster replacement...
EDIT: the two codes you gave are related to radio/video harness issues which again may be related to the cluster replacement...
You may enjoy this story - it's more QA or "inspection and testing" related but similar ....I'm a retired Reliability Engineer and many studies have been done over the last 50 years that have literally proven that 60+% of failures (20 year long case studies of military and civilian aircraft) are typically related to work that was just performed, things like:
1) installing a defective part (harness wired incorrectly) which fails shortly thereafter
2) installing said part incorrectly (think forgetting to grease a bearing at install or overtorquing stock lug nuts and damaging the outer sheath)
3) damaging a different part during the repair (there's tons of threads here where someone drilled through a wiring harness while doing an install of something else)