1. Welcome to Tundras.com!

    You are currently viewing as a guest! To get full-access, you need to register for a FREE account.

    As a registered member, you’ll be able to:
    • Participate in all Tundra discussion topics
    • Transfer over your build thread from a different forum to this one
    • Communicate privately with other Tundra owners from around the world
    • Post your own photos in our Members Gallery
    • Access all special features of the site

Garage engine replacement 2005 crew cab v8

Discussion in '1st Gen Tundras (2000-2006)' started by LukeW, Jun 17, 2025.

  1. Jun 17, 2025 at 7:58 PM
    #1
    LukeW

    LukeW [OP] New Member

    Joined:
    Apr 28, 2025
    Member:
    #134163
    Messages:
    4
    Gender:
    Male
    Vehicle:
    2005 crew cab TRD V8
    blew up engine:(
    About a month ago I unfortunately sent a rod through my block and decided to replace the motor in my garage. After many many hours of work I have the replacement engine in but am getting a crank no start. I don’t know a whole lot about the new engine it is from a 2005 sequoia it supposedly has 240k miles and my truck only has 187k. The place I bought it from said the compression test showed a range of 150-170 psi all around. When I turn the key there is about 2-3 seconds of what sounds like it wants to start but it doesn’t. The rails are getting fuel and the crank and cam sensors look fine. Currently stumped looking for some advice.IMG_3308.jpg IMG_3312.jpg

    52E9FFA1-73D5-4716-AA13-E672BAB25F4F.jpg
    IMG_3310.jpg
     
    G_unit3000 likes this.
  2. Jun 17, 2025 at 8:19 PM
    #2
    G_unit3000

    G_unit3000 New Member

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2024
    Member:
    #118959
    Messages:
    266
    First Name:
    Gman
    North East
    Vehicle:
    2005 Tundra DC 4x4
    I'm sure someone will chime in shortly with good advice. I am always impressed when I see people digging in at this level. I just paid a shop $4k to replace cracked exhaust manifolds on my gx470 that also has the 4.7L. I didn't think I could do that job on my back in the driveway.

    Anyway, I'm wondering what happened when your Tundra threw the rod? Any idea why this happened? Backstory?
     
    Bought2Pull likes this.
  3. Jun 17, 2025 at 8:39 PM
    #3
    LukeW

    LukeW [OP] New Member

    Joined:
    Apr 28, 2025
    Member:
    #134163
    Messages:
    4
    Gender:
    Male
    Vehicle:
    2005 crew cab TRD V8
    blew up engine:(
    It has unfortunately been an extremely painstaking process. The only work I had done to the truck prior had been the bumper and the I put bilstein 5100s all around. The truck had died as I blew through a decently sized puddle with my foot to the floor. It shut off about halfway through and I heard a splash underneath. I then Popped the hood and took of the intake pipe and peeked into the throttle to see it full of water. It appears that when I was trimming my fender liner for the bumper I had cut it too high below the intake hole. So all mud that my tires were slinging went straight into my intake.

    IMG_3363.jpg

    IMG_3358.jpg
     
    jerryallday and G_unit3000 like this.
  4. Jun 17, 2025 at 8:42 PM
    #4
    G_unit3000

    G_unit3000 New Member

    Joined:
    Jun 25, 2024
    Member:
    #118959
    Messages:
    266
    First Name:
    Gman
    North East
    Vehicle:
    2005 Tundra DC 4x4
    Ugh, hydrolocked. Sorry to hear that.
    I hope that you get some good advice from all of the mechanics on here.
     
  5. Jun 17, 2025 at 9:34 PM
    #5
    ZappBrannigan

    ZappBrannigan The mind is willing but the flesh is weak

    Joined:
    Dec 31, 2018
    Member:
    #23724
    Messages:
    2,551
    Gender:
    Male
    Canada, by way of Hawaii
    Vehicle:
    2018 1794 MGM
    NVS light bar
    Did you check the timing while you had the engine out?

    Did you reuse your old known-functional sensors on the new engine?
     
  6. Jun 17, 2025 at 9:54 PM
    #6
    Red&03Taco

    Red&03Taco YUT

    Joined:
    Dec 19, 2023
    Member:
    #108762
    Messages:
    621
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Jerad
    Vehicle:
    2018 Platinum Tundra, 2016 Platinum Sequoia, 2003 Tacoma SR5 V6 5Spd
    Are all your grounds connected and hopefully clean of mud/rust/etc.?
     
    ZappBrannigan likes this.
  7. Jun 17, 2025 at 9:58 PM
    #7
    LukeW

    LukeW [OP] New Member

    Joined:
    Apr 28, 2025
    Member:
    #134163
    Messages:
    4
    Gender:
    Male
    Vehicle:
    2005 crew cab TRD V8
    blew up engine:(
    I just realized that I did not replace the cam sensors. I replaced the vvti and crank sensor but I did not do the knock sensors or cam sensors. I wonder if there is a way I could narrow down which one because both of those look like pretty tedious jobs and I would rather not have to do both. All the grounds are on I had a couple people double check and I don't think thats the issue.
     
    ZappBrannigan and G_unit3000 like this.
  8. Jun 18, 2025 at 3:19 AM
    #8
    j_supra

    j_supra Dreamin about boooost!

    Joined:
    Nov 13, 2021
    Member:
    #70613
    Messages:
    245
    Gender:
    Male
    Manitoba, Canada
    Vehicle:
    2008 Tundra Limited
    20" Vision brawl, 33.5" Toyo at3s, Bilstein 5100s, LTH, custom exhaust, AEM filter, TRD intake pipe, Joying HU, hertz components and sub, Rokblokz XL, AVS visors
    Maybe check the basics, compression, fuel, spark. I know you say they said it had good compression, but doesn't hurt to confirm. While you have all 8 plugs out, take a look at them. Are they wet with fuel? Good condition? Then check for spark too while you're at it. If you don't have fuel or spark, I'd suspect cam/crank sensors. If you have one or the other, I'd suspect the related systems to what you don't have. If you have both then perhaps mechanical timing is off or compression is low or maybe mass air sensor? Was it cleaned after ingesting water?

    Side note, I did head gaskets in my 06 years back. When plugging the engine harness back in, I plugged in the oil pressure sensor but missed the crank sensor. It would crank but not start. Double checked my work and realized I missed the crank sensor. Fired right up. Maybe just double check yours
     
    ZappBrannigan and G_unit3000 like this.
  9. Jun 18, 2025 at 4:08 AM
    #9
    NickB_01TRD

    NickB_01TRD You don't need less cars, just more driveway.

    Joined:
    Jun 16, 2021
    Member:
    #64346
    Messages:
    2,741
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Nick
    KY
    Vehicle:
    01 Tundra V8 4X4 AC SR5 TRD
    No fender liners or improperly trimmed liners have been the source of basically every major engine failure here other than the timing belt. It doesn’t happen a lot but it happens. Y'all check your fender liners before a puddle turns your engine into a brick.
     
    G_unit3000 likes this.
  10. Jun 18, 2025 at 4:45 AM
    #10
    FirstGenVol

    FirstGenVol Recovering mangler

    Joined:
    Dec 13, 2018
    Member:
    #22934
    Messages:
    14,306
    East TN
    Vehicle:
    2002 AC TRD 4x4 V8
    I could be wrong but my understanding is that these engines are not a direct swap. I think you have to also swap the wiring harness.

    Did your research show otherwise?
     
    ATBAV8 likes this.
  11. Jun 18, 2025 at 6:55 AM
    #11
    shifty`

    shifty` We call it “riding the gravy train”

    Joined:
    Jun 20, 2020
    Member:
    #48239
    Messages:
    29,819
    ATL
    Vehicle:
    '06 AC Limited V8/4WD
    (see signature for truck info)
    Knock sensors won’t cause what you’re seeing, I’d get that out of your head. At worst you’d go into limp mode after starting. Cam sensor can be replaced easily without major disassembly, as can the VVTi solenoids on either head, top of cam tower, on the edge pointing toward the intake.

    Timing is my first suspect here, 100% … That said, I know you said you’ve got fuel delivery. Just for shits and giggles, did you try spraying a 2-3 second shot of starting fluid behind the throttle body plate and cranking? Does it fire?

    If not, your problem is likely not fuel delivery. It’s timing or a sensor or the ECU not functioning properly, or just a bad engine.
     
    G_unit3000 and ZappBrannigan like this.
  12. Jun 18, 2025 at 7:02 AM
    #12
    shifty`

    shifty` We call it “riding the gravy train”

    Joined:
    Jun 20, 2020
    Member:
    #48239
    Messages:
    29,819
    ATL
    Vehicle:
    '06 AC Limited V8/4WD
    (see signature for truck info)
    PS - tell us more about the install. I forgot about something, let me explain after some other questions.

    Any codes set?

    Did you use the original engine harness?

    Are you using the original ECU?

    Did you swap over the throttle body assembly and other electronics, since sometimes it’s pinout is different between years and Tundra/Sequoia? (Did you check the EWD for both to verify pinout is the same?)
     
    G_unit3000 and ZappBrannigan like this.
  13. Jun 20, 2025 at 8:16 AM
    #13
    LukeW

    LukeW [OP] New Member

    Joined:
    Apr 28, 2025
    Member:
    #134163
    Messages:
    4
    Gender:
    Male
    Vehicle:
    2005 crew cab TRD V8
    blew up engine:(
    Sorry I haven’t responded been a busy few days. I used the original harness and used the throttle from new engine. I finally pulled the code and i just got a p1340 and p1330. About to get started on taking those cam sensors out.

    IMG_3367.jpg
     
    shifty` likes this.

Products Discussed in

To Top