I think you have more than one problem.
I have a hard time with the search function on this site so I usually do a site-specific search on Google. If you search for the glow plug wiring harness you will get two major discussions that took place here:
1.) The old harness was not always installed correctly (so it reads the wrong glow plug, hence your confusion)
2.) The new harness, before hooking it to the new glow plugs, requires the ECM to be updated.
3.) Surefire way to detect rotten plug is by checking the resistance of the plug:
ATXKJ posted on 5/4/201:
"You can also trace a wire up to the 4:1 connector - pull that and you can measure all 4 glow plugs - to ground - you should have ~ .5 to 1 ohm (note: that's really low make sure your meter can read it) - bad ones are typically 50-100+ ohms.
pull the cap off of the plug you think is bad - remeasure the resistance - it should now be open."
If it is a plug, you will have replace four (due to the changeover to stainless GP's), install the new harness and then have the ECM reflashed. I feel your pain, I will literally start and hopefully end this next week. Then I will have to pay Keith to get my ECM flashed again...maybe he'll through in a turbo for free
That said, my second glow plug from the front of the engine is out again and has been out since July. On my first cool (50 deg) morning, it runs rougher than it should for about 1 minutes but then it smoothes out. Since this is the third time its happened, my panties just refuse to wad up anymore. If we all get together, my toast will be that
all future diesel Jeeps parts be as dependable as the d
n CEL light! It was off for a year thanks to Keith and the good folks at GDE but has been on again since July until I get the GP's replaced.
While I'm at it. I will replace the fuel head. Its been unplugged since before last winter (yes, you read that right but I was lucky a fuel times and it is not worth the worry to go through another winter without the heater) due to the plug being burnt and melted. I'll need to remove it anyway to get the real (not reader-based) GP #4 up near the firewall.
My point is, unless you live up in Alaska or central Canada, your glow plug is likely not why your jeep is running rough but it may still need to be replaced as colder weather comes in. If your plug is burnt on your fuel heater, you may as well replace it when digging in to get to the GP's. Good luck.
B2
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2005 CRD Sport - "Blackie"
Tow Package
Trac Loc
GDE EcoTune w/ unl torque
Goodyear Wrangler SilentArmor Tires
over 192,000+ miles
100k mile service performed
5V Glow Plugs Installed and ECM updated
