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Its horrible. Its much louder in person. Its something electrical if I had to guess. ITs that kind of feedback noise. I removed my dash cam and radar detector just to make sure its not that. No change.
I do have a Baja Design reverse light kit installed. The SPV kit with reverse activated or manual switch override. The reverse activated harness goes into driver rear light. ITs easy to remove, so I took that out just to see if it made any difference. It DID NOT.
BUT. I did smell the same burning electronic smell I had smelled earlier. The back of my tail light and the harness plug that went into my light both had the same smell. Not good. Everything functions just fine though. And did before too. Maybe I walked into another problem about to happen? I dont know. But I removed the reverse trigger part of my baja designs reverse light kit for good.
The sound is for sure coming from the back of the cab too. That I confirmed today.
Anyhow, we will see what the dealer says on monday. But so far I have no fix and found a funky smelling tail light.
Meh.
Hey Bigworm,
Someone sent me a text and said you were having some issues.
It is always a good idea to eliminate things like you are doing in order to nail down the issue.
I want you to know though, that based on your explanation, your tail light adapter would have nothing to do with that. Before I started SPV Parts, I was DEEPLY involved with Ford and Roush and know the ins and outs of these vehicles pretty well. Of course I can't completely diagnose it for you over this. I can hopefully give you some more insight.
First, lets talk about the mechanics of your tail light/tail light adapter. The tail light circuit is run THROUGH the PCM also known as the vehicles computer. The computer programming senses amp changes and sensitivity. If there were too much draw, where something would cause a melting or burning smell in the tail light or plugged into the tail light (remember the adapter draws power from the tail light). The computer in the truck would turn OFF the tail light. This actually occurs BEFORE the fuse even blows.
We have seen this when someone tries to plug lights into the tail lights that are too big, such as an S8 light bar.
So if there were a problem with the tail light, it would STOP working. So verify you tail light/running lights work. If they do, you should be fine with your tail lights. Even if the electronics for example in the tail light were shorting out, it would spike the voltage and the computer would shut them off. These new vehicles are crazy smart. So that's why you can only use smaller lights that are 2 amps and UNDER each, for a pair with a tail light adapter. Remember, that is also only in short spurts. So unless you are in reverse, the tail light, reverse lights, etc would have no power.
So, lets get to my theory from watching your video. The first video I would have never come to this thought. However the second one, when you were outside and under the rear wheel well made me think of this possibility. Also, that humming and vibration. There are no moving parts in the tail lights or add on lights or wiring. So for something that loud, it HAS TO have moving parts or something that is laying over something that is loose enough to vibrate.
So you smell something burning right? and you have that loud noise. I know someone mentioned the shocks. It could be the active valves. Maybe. That's a possibility. My theory though based on the sound and smell, is the exhaust.... Remember, you have the active valve exhaust with actuator motors in the pipes. You can electronically activate the motors and open and close them and change the sound. They are MOTORS so they move. They can vibrate. It could be tied to just those. Or, it could be a complex issue. With the smell and burning smell, it could be that maybe a valve is stuck or something and its getting hot on the one side and burning off sediment or coatings or something (that smell coming out of the exhaust would go UP (heat rises) and make the tail light potentially smell. It is right above the tail pipe.
It could be maybe a Catalytic Converter issue in the exhaust. If they cats have an issue and get really hot. They could cause the electronic actuators in the exhaust to malfunction potentially as well. So it could be a compounded problem.
However, again. In trying to zoom in on potential culprits, you want something that creates heat (the exhaust) can move or vibrate (the exhaust baffles, heat shields, hangers, shock actuators, etc). But if the smell is for sure not a normal smell, I don't think it would be the shocks. If they were to malfunction enough to smell like they were REALLY burning, the fuse or power to them would also be cut off. They could of course make the noise. The smell too? I don't think so, unless the smell is something else and you just didn't realize it. Sometimes something happens like this and we look for every possible thing and sometimes put something in the equation we didn't realize was already there.
If the burning smell is associated, I am betting on the exhaust.
Funny thing, in the 2024 I just picked up. I started hearing a rattling inside all the sudden. Out of nowhere. It made no sense. The faster I went, the louder it got. At first, I thought it was a speaker or an amp or something. Then I turned off the "Cooled Seats" randomly, and it went away. I then turned them back on, and it got louder when I turned them up. It turns out something is in the fan motor/blade or something. Like a card in a bike wheel. I haven't messed with it yet, bat that's what's going on there.
Let me know if you need any help or have questions.
John
SPV Parts