Not Your Typical Repairs

Most of the work maintenance shops do is repetitive, but sometimes a unique problem can arise, and finding the solution can be a time-consuming process.
Magnets, lightning strikes and even pet hair have led to some of the most challenging and unusual repairs that Ross Hoover has encountered.Ìę
âWith magnet interference or animal hair, there isnât a part that failed, so you donât have anything that leads you to the problem,â said Hoover, who is director of service at Summit Truck Group, a dealership based in Lewisville, Texas.Ìę
Magnetic interference can come from aftermarket components, such as magÂnetically mounted side-view cameras or devices drivers attach to the fuel line to try to increase fuel mileage.
ÌęâA lot of those are being placed close to sensors,â Hoover said.
ÌęâThe sensors are touchy and will randomly throw off codes that will take gobs and gobs of time,â he said, adding that he also has seen situations where a fan clutch has come apart catastrophically.
ÌęâIt has a couple of giant magnets that can shatter and go everywhere,â he said. âThey drift in and we will go on a wild goose chase to find a piece of a magnet.â

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ÌęShedding from driversâ pets also can create problems.Ìę
âIf a truck is pretty new, you rule out that a filter is plugged up, but when you start to diagnose why a filter isnât working, youâll see it is covered in pet hair,â Hoover said.
Finding the full progressive damage from a lightning strike is difficult as everything electronic on a Class 8 typically runs through a system called a 5-volt reference.Ìę
âWhen a strike of lightning hits the truck, it will get on that 5-volt reference wiring harness and fry everything in its way until it dissipates,â Hoover said. âThere are so many different functions in a truck and you have to start going through every single one of them.âÌę
Whatâs more, all of the different systems on the truck are communicating with each other.
Jerry Bodkins, on-site program manager at truck stop chain TravelCenters of America, put it this way: âYou can do something to one system and it affects all the others, and you wouldnât even think it is related.â
Bodkins once saw an issue arise from a sensor in an anti-lock braking system getting bumped during wheel-end work.Ìę
âIf that ABS is out of calibration, it wonât fire up. Talk about an atypical situation,â he said. âIt took three to four people on the phone and some quick work on the computer to figure out what happened.â
When fleets encounter challenging repairs, they often turn to dealerships for help.Ìę
Among some fleets, the need to outsource repairs is increasing as Class 8 trucks become more and more complex.Ìę
âThere is a learning curve, and during that learning curve, weâll send more to the dealership,â said Dan Carrano, director of fleet maintenance for A. Duie Pyle, a less-than-truckload carrier based in West Chester, Pa.Ìę
In the past 12 years, the pace of change on new equipment and technology has increased, Carrano said. Automated transmissions, exhaust afterÂtreatment systems and collision mitigation systems have brought new issues.Ìę
In addition, prior to 2006, the truck had just the engine control module, and the vehicle could produce approximately 300 codes. âTodayâs trucks have 11 to 14 different modules, and they can generate thousands of different codes,â Carrano said.Ìę

A fleet technician performs maintenance work on a collision mitigation system. (A. Duie Pyle)
A. Duie Pyle ranks No. 79 on the Transport Topics Top 100 list of the largest for-hire carriers in North America.Ìę
Scott Dixon, operations manager at Four Star Freightliner in Montgomery, Ala., said there is a misconception that the diagnostic code leads technicians directly to the problem.Ìę
âIf that was the case, I wouldnât need highly trained technicians,â he said. âA lot of times, the code is a symptom and you have to figure out the root cause.âÌę
In addition to equipment becoming more sophisticated, comfort features have increased, with drivers and fleets adding satellite televisions, auxiliary power equipment and microwaves.Ìę
âEvery year something new is coming out that is adding a drain or taxing that truck,â said Jim Reed, vice president of truck service marketing at TravelCenters of America.Ìę
Dixon said in todayâs trucks, even mundane tasks, such as changing fuel filters, are getting more complicated.Ìę
âOn the old ones youâd take it out, put a new one in and go,â he said. âNow you may have to spend money on a tool to prime the fuel system.â
ÌęBefore buying a new tool, A. Duie Pyleâs Carrano looks at the demand and its cost. If it is something that is needed frequently, the fleet buys it for each of its maintenance facilities.
âIf it is a tool that isnât frequently used, weâll buy two to three and keep them at our parts distribution center so when they need the part, weâll send the tool,â Carrano said.Ìę
Summit Truck Group locations share big-ticket, mobile tools that arenât used daily. These include huck guns that are used to install high-torque fasteners on frame rails as well as counter-bore systems that are used to measure piston cylinder liner protrusion and cut and clean the deck of the cylinder block, Hoover said.Ìę
Scott Allen, director of fleet assets and maintenance for Lafayette, La.-based DuprĂ© Logistics, said the company transports a mobile alignment machine from location to location.Ìę
âWe might put it in Houston for a couple of months and align a bunch of equipment, then take it to Baton Rouge for a few months,â Allen said, noting this machine can cost $50,000 to $60,000. The company also has a mobile wash system that locations share, he added.Ìę
DuprĂ© Logistics tries to keep all maintenance in-house, but works with outside providers in areas where it doesnât have a brick-and-mortar location, and for powertrain repairs â engines, transmissions and rear ends â because the companyâs shops donât have the tooling, time or technicians needed for those, Allen said.

Performing maintenance work in-house helps Dupré Logistics prioritize work, cut costs and ensure quality, the company says. (Dupré Logistics)
Overall, todayâs trucks require more sophisticated hardware and software.
âIt isnât about turning a screw driver anymore. It is about getting the software and getting into a portal to see how the repair is done,â said Jack ÂPoster, vehicle maintenance reporting standards (VMRS) services manager at the Technology & Maintenance Council, part of American Trucking Associations.
A. Duie Pyle, which has 18 shops in its network, has one or two laptops at each location. Carrano said all truck makers and component manufacturers, such as Wabco and Bendix, require software for their specific equipment.
âBefore you know it, you have a laptop loaded up with software. Sometimes you get conflict of software,â he said. âThe challenges lie in keeping them operational.â
The need for manufacturer-specific technology often means a shop owner who mostly works on Cummins engines but is faced with repairing another brand of equipment would have to buy expensive software for a one-time use or turn the business away, said Tyler Robertson, CEO of Diesel Laptops, a diagnostics software provider.
However, Diesel Laptops has created remote programming kits that can be sent by second-day air. Technical support experts can remotely
access the machine and help perform the service.
The companyâs technicians âwill perform all the needed work once the kit arrives on-site,â Robertson said.
âThis includes performing necessary backups, programming changes and verification,â he said. âWe also include proper hardware to connect directly to the ECM, thus avoiding conflicts on the datalink.âÌę
Reed, of TravelCenters of America, said the cost of diagnostic equipment can add up quickly.
âYou need to make sure youâre buying the right tool and your people are training on it,â he said, adding that without the proper training, even the best tools wonât be used.
Kyle Treadway, president of Kenworth Sales Co., a dealership based in West Valley City, Utah, said there has to be critical mass of work to justify the specialized tooling.
âIf a fleet has a mix of truck makes/models, they are even less likely to invest in tooling and training that is increasingly expensive and specialized,â Treadway said.
Dealer technicians must follow tight diagnostic protocols from all component suppliers and OEMs.Ìę

Dupré Logistics keeps most of its maintenance work in-house but outsources powertrain repairs. (Dupré Logistics)
âSometimes that means following a late release/update of repair instructions, ordering a specialized part or tool, and/or following step-by-step repair instructions from the OEM/Âsupplier,â Treadway said.
Because technology is changing rapidly, Summit Truck Group has adopted a policy of no printed material.Ìę
âIt just changes too much, and what was the troubleshooting tree today might be different tomorrow,â Hoover said.Ìę
Fleets and service providers said they have established protocols for technicians to follow if they are stumped.
At A. Duie Pyle, technicians can contact the companyâs trainer for technical assistance.
âHe can hop on their laptop and see all of the different readings the laptop is providing and relay what the fleet tech should be looking for,â Carrano said.Ìę
TA also has a master tech available for technicians to talk to for additional help around the clock, Reed said.Ìę
At dealerships, technicians can reach out to the OEMs for support.Ìę
Summit Truck Group also has a Âforum for technicians to share information.Ìę
âEvery month, technicians are encouraged to share a tech tip or something odd theyâve found that people should know about,â Hoover said, adding that the dealership hosts a tech challenge, bringing together the top technicians from each of its locations for a competition. âThey get to network the whole time and hopefully bring back what they learned to the shop.â
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