6716
Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2012
- Posts
- 839
"The intake manifold air control actuator (IMAC) on engine bank 1 has a circuit performance issue."
So I am on vacation, towing a 7000-pound camper, 1000 miles from home, with a lot of fishing to do for the next week before heading back. This is the one code coming up. I cleared it and it stayed off while running. When I start the truck after clearing, the check engine light stays off until I put it in drive and start going.
The interwebs seems to think it's important to address but not super super urgent.
The closest dealer is 50 miles away, and even assuming I can get a service appointment it could take days to get parts depending on the parts. I'm a little concerned that if I bring it in there and then refuse the repair on the basis of wait time I'll be in a bad spot for warranty position. Though I suppose Chevy already knows that the code lit up, since I see it on the Chevy app. Plus their surveillance system knows where I am and how far I've gone and how the truck has performed since it came up.
I don't think I notice any performance issue -- primarily they say emissions and low fuel economy, though towing through wind and mountains certainly burns both diesel and DEF. I'll get a different perspective running without the trailer today.
What I want to do is drive around (not towing) and find fishing spots for the next week, then pull the camper 1000 miles home and then take it in for service.
Just how stupid a plan is that?
Is it weird to have this code at 32000 miles?
Could low-quality diesel be the culprit? I did buy some diesel at almost-too-good-to-be-true prices the day before it lit up. But I guess I don't know beyond pricing how to evaluate diesel fuel quality.
So I am on vacation, towing a 7000-pound camper, 1000 miles from home, with a lot of fishing to do for the next week before heading back. This is the one code coming up. I cleared it and it stayed off while running. When I start the truck after clearing, the check engine light stays off until I put it in drive and start going.
The interwebs seems to think it's important to address but not super super urgent.
The closest dealer is 50 miles away, and even assuming I can get a service appointment it could take days to get parts depending on the parts. I'm a little concerned that if I bring it in there and then refuse the repair on the basis of wait time I'll be in a bad spot for warranty position. Though I suppose Chevy already knows that the code lit up, since I see it on the Chevy app. Plus their surveillance system knows where I am and how far I've gone and how the truck has performed since it came up.
I don't think I notice any performance issue -- primarily they say emissions and low fuel economy, though towing through wind and mountains certainly burns both diesel and DEF. I'll get a different perspective running without the trailer today.
What I want to do is drive around (not towing) and find fishing spots for the next week, then pull the camper 1000 miles home and then take it in for service.
Just how stupid a plan is that?
Is it weird to have this code at 32000 miles?
Could low-quality diesel be the culprit? I did buy some diesel at almost-too-good-to-be-true prices the day before it lit up. But I guess I don't know beyond pricing how to evaluate diesel fuel quality.