The purpose of the cooling system is to maintain an efficient engine coolant temperature level during all engine operating conditions. This is accomplished by using a thermostat to regulate the flow of coolant from the engine to the radiator. The thermostat also allows the engine to warm up faster by not allowing coolant flow through the radiator until the engine has reached its operating temperature. An engine coolant temperature (ECT) sensor monitors the temperature of the coolant. This input is used by the powertrain control module (PCM) for engine control and as an enabling criteria for various diagnostics.
The PCM monitors total accumulated air flow to determine if the engine run time is sufficient to reach engine operating temperature. If the coolant temperature does not increase normally or does not reach the regulating temperature of the thermostat, diagnostics that use engine coolant temperature as enabling criteria, may not run when expected.
If engine coolant fails to reach a preset target temperature before a calculated air flow is accumulated P0128 will set.
• | No MAF, IAT, ECT or VSS DTCs present. |
• | Coolant temperature is more than -40°C (-40°F). |
• | Air temperature is more than -7°C (20°F). |
• | Engine running for more than 4 minutes. |
• | VSS average more than 15 MPH over the key cycle. |
• | Mass air flow average reading more than 23 gm/sec. |
• | Vehicle driven more than 3 miles. |
The length of time for the engine coolant to reach a pre-set temperature is more than it should be.
• | The PCM will illuminate the malfunction indicator lamp (MIL) during the second consecutive trip in which the diagnostic test has been run and failed. |
• | The PCM will store conditions which were present when the DTC set as Freeze Frame/Failure Records data. |
• | The PCM will turn OFF the malfunction indicator lamp (MIL) during the third consecutive trip in which the diagnostic has run and passed. |
• | The history DTC will clear after 40 consecutive warm-up cycles have occurred without a malfunction. |
• | The DTC can be cleared by using a scan tool. |
The DTC P0128 diagnostic test will not run if the engine is not run for at least 25 minutes. If the DTC P0128 does not reset, check the following items:
• | The engine coolant level |
• | The thermostat operation, refer to Thermostat Diagnosis in Engine Cooling. |
• | The cooling fans' operation, refer to Electric Cooling Fan Diagnosis . |
• | Check for high resistance in the wiring related to the ECT sensor. Also, check for faulty connections at the ECT sensor and the PCM. Refer to Testing for Intermittent Conditions and Poor Connections in Wiring Systems. |
Inspect the harness connectors of the ECT and the PCM for backed out terminals, improper mating, broken locks, improperly formed or damaged terminals, and faulty terminal to wire connections. Refer to Connector Repairs in Wiring Systems. |
The number below refers to the step number on the diagnostic table.
Step | Action | Values | Yes | No |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Did you perform the Powertrain On Board Diagnostic (OBD) System Check? | -- | ||
2 |
Important: If any other DTCs are set, perform those DTC diagnostics first. With a scan tool, determine if DTC P0128 was set this ignition. Is DTC P0128 set this ignition? | -- | ||
3 |
Important: In order to provide the best opportunity for the DTC to reset, operate the vehicle with the heater on MAX and the heater fan on HIGH. Does the scan tool indicate that DTC P0128 set this ignition? | -- | Go to Diagnostic Aids | |
Is the observed temperature within 5 percent of the predicted temperature? | -- | |||
5 | Replace the ECT sensor. Refer to Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor Replacement . Did you complete the replacement? | -- | -- | |
6 |
Does the DTC reset? | -- | System OK |