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Scania DC13 SPN 723 Fault Explained – Real Cause After Washing & How to Fix It.

Scania DC13 SPN 723 Fault – Real Diagnosis Guide (FMI 1, 9, 10, 17) After Washing the Machine

Crankshaft position sensor faults on Scania DC13 engines are common, but when multiple FMI codes appear together — especially after washing the machine — the diagnosis becomes tricky. This guide explains the real causes behind SPN 723 faults and includes a real‑world troubleshooting conversation to help technicians understand the problem deeply.


Diagnostic-steps-for-om471-injector.

Clean technical illustration showing Scania DC13 engine with labeled crankshaft sensor location and flywheel housing inspection area.


What SPN 723 Means on Scania DC13

SPN 723 refers to the Crankshaft Position Sensor (CKP) signal. When the ECU detects an unstable or weak RPM signal, it triggers one or more FMI codes:

FMI CodeMeaning
FMI 9Intermittent / abnormal signal
FMI 10Abnormal rate of change (RPM jumps)
FMI 17High‑speed signal lost
FMI 1Signal too low / weak

When all four appear together, the ECU is losing crankshaft synchronization at different RPM ranges.


Typical Symptoms

  • Engine warning light
  • Fault appears when RPM increases
  • Fault disappears at idle
  • Occasional misfire or RPM drop
  • Hard starting in some cases
  • No improvement after replacing CKP sensor

Common Causes of SPN 723 on Scania DC13

Even though the crankshaft sensor is often blamed first, the real causes are usually deeper.

✅ 1. Flywheel Surface Contamination (MOST COMMON after washing)

Scania DC13 uses a magnetic pickup CKP sensor that reads the flywheel edge, not a visible tone ring.
When the machine is washed:

  • Water enters the flywheel housing
  • Rust forms on the flywheel surface
  • Mud or moisture sticks to the flywheel
  • Metal dust becomes magnetized

This weakens the magnetic signal, especially at high RPM.

✅ 2. Internal Wiring Break (vibration‑sensitive)

The wire may look perfect outside but be broken inside.

  • Idle → OK
  • High RPM → vibration → signal drops

✅ 3. Weak ECU Ground

Poor grounding causes:

  • Weak signal → FMI 1
  • Intermittent → FMI 9
  • High‑RPM dropout → FMI 17

✅ 4. ECU Connector Pin Loose

A loose CKP pin at the ECU creates unstable RPM readings.

✅ 5. Flywheel Damage (rare but possible)

If a flywheel notch is damaged, the signal becomes unstable.


Why Replacing the Sensor Doesn’t Fix It

Many technicians replace the crankshaft sensor first — but if the problem is:

  • Rust
  • Water
  • Dirt
  • Internal wiring break
  • Weak ground

…the new sensor will behave exactly like the old one.

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Real Conversation Example (From Field Diagnosis)

Technician:
“SPN 723 FMI 9 is coming. I replaced the crankshaft sensor and checked wiring, but still same problem.”

Diagnosis:
If the fault appears only when RPM increases, the issue is not the sensor. It’s usually flywheel contamination or vibration‑sensitive wiring.


Technician:
“When we increase RPM, new fault codes come and then disappear.”

Diagnosis:
This confirms the ECU is losing crank signal at high speed.
This pattern matches:

  • Flywheel rust
  • Moisture
  • Dirt
  • Internal wiring break

Technician:
“One week before we washed the machine.”

This is the key clue.
Washing often introduces water into the flywheel housing, causing rust and contamination.


Technician:
“When I removed the sensor, I didn’t see any teeth.”

✅ Correct — Scania DC13 uses a magnetic sensor that reads the flywheel edge, not a visible tone ring.
The notches are internal and cannot be seen from the sensor hole.

Conclusion

SPN 723 with FMI 1, 9, 10, 17 on Scania DC13 is almost always caused by signal instability, not a bad sensor.
When the issue starts after washing, the most likely cause is flywheel contamination.

Cleaning the flywheel and sensor area usually solves the problem completely.

✅ How to Fix SPN 723 After Washing (Step‑by‑Step)

✅ 1. Remove the flywheel inspection cover

Located near the starter or bell housing.

✅ 2. Rotate the engine manually

Use crank pulley or flywheel.

✅ 3. Inspect the flywheel edge

Look for:

  • Rust
  • Mud
  • Water marks
  • Metal dust
  • Oil + water mixture

✅ 4. Clean the flywheel

Use:

  • Brake cleaner
  • Air pressure
  • Clean cloth

Do NOT use oil.

✅ 5. Clean the CKP sensor hole

Rust around the hole weakens the magnetic field.

✅ 6. Check ECU grounds

Clean and tighten all ground points.

✅ 7. Check wiring under vibration

Bend the harness gently while engine runs.

If RPM drops → internal wire break.


✅ Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

1. What does SPN 723 mean on a Scania DC13?

SPN 723 refers to the crankshaft position sensor signal. It indicates the ECU is losing or receiving an unstable RPM signal.

2. What causes SPN 723 FMI 9 on Scania engines?

FMI 9 means the crankshaft signal is intermittent. Common causes include flywheel rust, wiring vibration faults, or poor ECU grounding.

3. Why does SPN 723 appear after washing the machine?

Water can enter the flywheel housing, causing rust or contamination on the flywheel surface. This weakens the magnetic signal read by the CKP sensor.

4. Can a faulty crankshaft sensor cause SPN 723?

Yes, but if the sensor is new and properly installed, the fault is usually caused by flywheel contamination or wiring issues.

5. What is the difference between FMI 1, 9, 10, and 17?

Each FMI code represents a different type of signal loss:

  • FMI 1: Signal too low
  • FMI 9: Intermittent signal
  • FMI 10: Abnormal RPM change
  • FMI 17: Signal lost at high RPM

6. How do I inspect the flywheel on a Scania DC13?

Remove the inspection cover near the starter or bell housing. Rotate the engine manually and inspect the flywheel edge for rust, mud, or metal dust.

7. Can rust on the flywheel cause crankshaft sensor faults?

Yes. Rust interferes with the magnetic pickup signal, especially at high RPM, triggering SPN 723 faults.

8. Is the crankshaft sensor on Scania DC13 magnetic or Hall-effect?

Most Scania DC13 engines use a magnetic pickup sensor that reads the flywheel surface, not a visible tone ring.

9. What happens if the crankshaft sensor wiring is broken inside?

The sensor may work at idle but fail at high RPM due to vibration. This causes intermittent signal faults like FMI 9 and FMI 17.

10. How do I clean the flywheel to fix SPN 723?

Use brake cleaner, compressed air, and a clean cloth. Avoid oil-based cleaners, which attract dust and reduce signal quality.

11. Can poor ECU grounding cause SPN 723?

Yes. Weak or corroded ground connections can cause unstable sensor signals and multiple FMI codes.

12. What tools are needed to inspect the flywheel?

Basic tools include a crank pulley barring tool, brake cleaner, flashlight, and access to the inspection cover.

13. Should I replace the sensor if SPN 723 appears?

Only if the sensor is confirmed faulty. If the sensor is new and properly installed, check the flywheel and wiring first.

14. How do I test the crankshaft sensor signal?

Use a multimeter to check voltage and resistance. You can also test signal drop by gently bending the wiring harness during engine operation.

15. Can SPN 723 cause engine stalling?

Yes. If the ECU loses crankshaft signal at high RPM, it may trigger misfires, RPM drops, or even engine shutdown.




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