Burnt wire harness under valve cover

arrowstrap

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Can someone tell me what it is that causes the wire harness to burn under the valve cover? i just replaced mine a few months ago and now it appears to be acting up again. i havent pulled the valve cover yet but when i started it up the truck was on an idling rollercoaster.

No codes, or other indicators... other than... i changed my oil and over filled it by about a quart... figured the new oil filter would swallow it. then i took a 300 mile trip with no issues. i forget to recheck the oil level.

anyhow, i got to thinking about the burn harness i replaced... then i got to wondering it burnt.
 

arrowstrap

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Last time i had this issue I tested the plugs and had one bad plug. i supose i should have replaced them all but i only replaced the one. i'll hvae to crack into it this weekend and see whats going on.
 

arrowstrap

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The valve cover gasket inside connector is melted as well as the wireing goint to the plugs/injectors. this is the opposite side that i repaired for the same issue a few months ago. Ford said they ALWAYS have theese items on the shelf. what is causeing this expence? all me plugs checked out to be good other than some burnt residue on the tips.

if this is such a common issue why does no one have an answer as to the WHY and why is there no fix? can i expect to have to replace all this again in another six months? ... why is it getting so hot that the plastic melts?????

ANY insight would greatly taken in.

Thanks
 

Crumm

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I don't think I have ever heard why they burn out but I have also not heard of people having constant problems with them. I am guessing that your replaced parts will give you many years of trouble free service.
 

RacerX

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Excess resistance in the circuit is what causes it to burn the harness. Wiring is to small to handle the heat when the plug doesn't use the amps up to heat the tip. Heres a simple explanation:

Ford/Nav VC gasket/harness was redesigned with better conductors several years ago. Here's a basic way to explain it without math at all:

If the glow plug (load) were to short, the burn or weld will happen at the point the short occurs. If you use a welder it welds at the electrode (load). It won't burn up your weld cables.

So why does the harness connector melt? Excessive Resistance causes heat. A GP has little resistance or ohms. It's nearly full power that warms the tip using up power to make heat. What little power isn't used returns thru ground to battery completing the circuit. Excess resistance or poor conduction from green stuff or corrosion prevents full power from flowing to the load (glow plug). The wiring gets hot and melts because you still have a complete circuit back to battery ground, but no load to use the power up and keep the wiring cool as power flows thru it.

Now think of the welder again. What happens if you forget to put a ground clamp on the metal to be welded and touch the electrode (load) to the metal? Nothing. The circuit is not complete, so no power flows at all. No weld or short.

Best way to prevent the burned wiring is a good conductor to your GP's. I pack Di grease in all underhood connectors. The best way to keep the connection moisture free and clean is silicone dielectric.

If your harness burn't from the GP connector back, then you may have a shorted plug. Ohm it, compared to the others. If it ohms out higher than the rest it's also BAD. The extra resistance is inside the plug, not allowing full power to the tip. Since it still conducts, heat builds and melts wiring. If the internal GP circuit doesn't conduct, no power flows--no heat. Just like a welder without a ground clamp. We would be better off if our GP's burn't out like light bulbs do. :)
 
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arrowstrap

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RacerX, thank you for your electrical lesson. I found myself unable to sleep unitll I learned a logical explanation for this reocurring disaster. I found it hard to settle with a "it just happens". I can see now how it happens, why, and the culpret. I found it hard to just replace parts without knowing the underlying problem.
 

strokersmoker17

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it could be the glow plugs, but another thing that makes them burn is either gas or either.
 

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