Engine shuts off while driving - SOLVED

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jfoj

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@viven44

I have been dealing with electronic failures for far too many years. Often many are solder joint related, long before the RoHS leadless or low lead solder all the way into the more modern RoHS solder. Its like the newer DI engines with DFM, we are actually going backwards trying to keep all of this junk working.

In my experience while there are solder joint problems with lead based solder, they were not at bad as what I have seen with the low lead/leadless solder. The low lead/leadless solder is too hard, does not expand and contract or flex like the lead based solder. It tends to crack/frature far too easily.

I have dealt with everything from ball grid array chips unsoldering themselves or breaking joints to having to service boards with the higher temp leadless solders that are a PITA to replace components on.

I used to say many years ago, if electronic circuits and computer modules could survive in the automotive world, they could clearly survive in the consumer electronic world if they had decent quality control and workmanship.

What I deal with a lot these days are the stupid mini/micro relays rated at 10-20 Amps that are no larger than a sugar cube that fail typically in 5-7 years depending on the applications. I have repaired/replaced so many boards with these stupid relays in everything from door lock modules, to refridgerators, humidifiers and many other products.

Have spend too much time with freeze spray and hair dryers or heat guns looking for components with thermal faults. Dealt with circuit boards with many different size conductors and headers where either wave solder or IR solder would not heat the mass of the larger diameter leads enough to get a proper solder joint, ending in cold solder joints on headers, larger relays pins and compenent with larger wire guages.

Some of the other fun I have dealt with is finding and repair circuit boards in the automotive industry that did not have conformal coating on the circuit boards where humidity caused the solder or lead to oxidize and form the white crystaline oxide that is conductive that would cause shorts on close terminals or surface mount parts.

Even lived thru the counterfiet capacitor problem or capacitor plague where I have had to repair countless flat screen TV's, computer monitors, computer boards and switching power supplies.

I get the cost cutting, but I also have seen counterfiet components, overly optimistic specs, and young engineers that do not have much experience missing out on safety margins. The other thing I find a lot is the male/female pins or contacts are either too small to handle the current, the female terminals get loose over time due to heating/cooling and vibration, or the really common problem is many aftermarket parts with male pins/terminals often use thinner gauge metal than OE to save a buck and the female terminals in the connectors will not properly grab the male pins/terminals causing intermittent problems, especially under the hood with wide temperature changes.

It is amazing things work as well as they do from a hardware standpoint, but the software and firmware is a far bigger issue these days!!!

One thing I need to notify GM about is the "Check Back Seat" child warning and how it more often than not does not function when I shut the truck off. Often due to my phone connected and streaming audio from an App or when I am pulling data from the OBDII port. While I will likely never need a reminder, I figured why not, too many sad stories of people not checking in the back of the car before they leave and lock it up.

The real scary part is these cars and too many things are almost now too complicated to repair these days. Less from the mechanical side but more from the electrical/electronic/software/firmware side. Unfortunately these vehicles are really too expensive to be disposable, but getting intermittent problems fixed are really difficult.

I wanted to get a newer vehicle before the stupid mandatory drunk driving detection technology is implemented where there is either some breath detector in the cabin or some way to determine alchohol in your system from your hands on the steering wheel! Wonder how often this will malfunction and leave someone stranded?

As the world burns.

Anyway I hope the poster with the random shut off probem finds a solution sooner than later. So many problems are often questionable connections or even battery related these days, especially with the Dynamic Charging Systems in these vehicles. I was monitoring the charging Voltage in my truck this week on a 5 hour trip in both directions and noticed it was in the 12.5-12.7 range for a long period. Luckily I know how the alternator is turned off on these platforms so I was not worried, but I was kind of surprised for how long the alternator was turned off while in the car for almost 5 hours.
 

viven44

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Yep... Seeing and troubleshoot failures daily in consumer and automotive chip packages ranging from temp cycle induced fatigue cracking, to temp/humidity/bias induced corrosion..... Seen one too many perils in the Man (or person to be politically correct) or Machine, or Method to trust electronics anymore... :eek:

Yes I do wish the original poster luck getting this resolved with the other dealer.
 

blanchard7684

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Well, they are replacing the engine. Something to do with crankshaft and metal flakes in the oil. Hopefully this fixes the issue. Gotta wait a month tho
Yikes . Probably the first 5.3 going down hard we’ve seen in a good while. and the code p0016 is implicated in the 6.2 recall recently posted.


Thanks for the update.
 

jfoj

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Interesting, I think this is one of the first situations that I've read about with the P0016 code proceeding a catastrophic engine failure. Sorry for your problems but at least it seems that someone's finally got to the bottom of the problem. I'm assuming that turning the power steering loaded the alternator up and put enough load on the engine that somehow it was causing the engine to die.

I guess I need to start interrogating ODB port on my car on a regular basis looking for a pending P0016 code?
 
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sasso

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Ok so

Final update.

Got my car back yesterday and finally had the chance to speak to the advisor properly.

Failed crankshaft bearing.

Basically once the bearing would heat up it would seize and stall the engine.

Oil was full of metal flakes

Once it would cool down it would break free and run until it’s at operating temps.

Changed engine assembly and it’s back to running. Hopefully it’s just a one off manufacturing defect as they said they haven’t seen it in the 5.3s before.
Anyway glad it is sorted.

Thank you everyone who followed And chimed in with your knowledge And advice.

Appreciate you all
 

jfoj

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@sasso

How many miles were on your vehicle when this first started and when the engine was finally replaced?

Do you typically drive mostly in town? I would guess if you drove a much on the highway the engine may have actually seized and it would have been easier for the dealer to determine what was wrong.

This is the exact same problem as the 6.2l is having, however, due to engine loading the 6.2l almost always hard seize, but there are a few cases of the 6.2l "stalling" like yours and restarting once the engine cools down but the 6.2l usually it will stall 1 or 2 times before the engine actually seizes. The 6.2l's tend fail more catastrophically.

If you are in the US, you may want to fill out a NHTSA complaint, it may help others in the future.

NHTSA Complaint Form
 
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sasso

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@sasso

How many miles were on your vehicle when this first started and when the engine was finally replaced?

Do you typically drive mostly in town? I would guess if you drove a much on the highway the engine may have actually seized and it would have been easier for the dealer to determine what was wrong.

This is the exact same problem as the 6.2l is having, however, due to engine loading the 6.2l almost always hard seize, but there are a few cases of the 6.2l "stalling" like yours and restarting once the engine cools down but the 6.2l usually it will stall 1 or 2 times before the engine actually seizes. The 6.2l's tend fail more catastrophically.

If you are in the US, you may want to fill out a NHTSA complaint, it may help others in the future.

NHTSA Complaint Form
No i do not do much highway driving, mostly 15-20 mins on the highway a day. when the fault first occured was after i had driven about 2.5 hours of highway driving.

i have done about 36k kms when it happened and the engine was replaced not long after. maybe 100kms.

Unfortunately i am not in the US
 

jfoj

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@sasso,

Thanks for the response.

The 2.5 hours on the highway make sense when the engine bearings would have tightened up.

The shorter trips probably did not cause the bearings to heat up as much to be a problem.

You were clearly borderline for the engine actually seizing while you were on a longer highway run.

Can you clarify "i have done about 36k kms when it happened and the engine was replaced not long after. maybe 100kms."

Did the problem start to occur at 36k kilometers (22369 miles)?

Are you saying you had the problem on and off and finally had the engine replaced at 100k kms (62137 miles)?

Where are you located? Just trying to get an idea of the climate you are dealing with on a regular basis.
 

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