I'm guessing you have a Federal truck, not CA? I attached the CA schematic just in case.
The Federal system is really easy to diagnose. It is just a large, custom, unreliable relay, but relays are simple. The CA system is harder to diagnose (in some ways), but far more reliable since it is all solid state. Anyway, what you want to do, in vaguely this order, is:
- Check for +12V on the output of the 175 amp glow plug fuse in the fuse block. I believe this is on the side of it nearest the front of the truck. If you don't have power here at all times, replace the fuse.
- Check for +12V on the input terminal of the glow plug controller. If you don't have power here, replace the wire connecting the fuse to the glow plug controller. I can't find a part number for this, but you could easily make a custom one the right size.
- Have a friend key-on the truck while you measure the glow plug output terminal. If it goes to +12V, your problem is downstream. If it stays at 0V, the controller or wiring is bad. If you want to just replace the controller, Federal part #97371491 is $133 for OE and $94 for a Doorman.
- If the controller is fine, just start tracing the glow plug wires/bus bars to find where it stops getting power. Replace as needed.
- If the controller is NOT working:
- Take the controller apart. There are 2 relays inside. Find the one connected to the glow plug output post, and disconnect it.
- Measure the 4 pins to diagnose if the relay or wiring is bad.
- First big pin should be +12V from the battery. If not, the internal harness of the glow plug controller is bad, replace the controller.
- Second big pin should show continuity to the glow plug output post. If not, the internal harness of the glow plug controller is bad, replace the controller.
- One small pin should be a good ground. If not, start tracing back and repair the ground.
- The other is the enable from the ECU. Have a friend key-on the truck and make sure this pin goes to +12V while the glow plug light is on (it may stay at +12V longer than the glow plug light, this is fine). If not, unplug the controller from the truck and check the pin on the plug where it connects to the engine harness.
- If the engine harness has the enable signal, the internal harness of the glow plug controller is bad, replace the controller.
- If the engine harness doesn't have the enable signal, start tracing it back to the Bale connectors (C107 pin A2) and ECU (C2 pin 6). Repair as necessary.
- If the signals are all present, the relay is bad. Replace the relay.
Odds are the relay inside the controller is shot. You can buy a new relay for cheap (DORMAN 904100 is $28), or, since it sounds like you don't use the intake air heater, swap the 2 relays inside the controller to get a bit more life out of it.
For Bdsankey, if you feel only one bank is working, trace the wiring between all the glow plugs. They run a bus bar on each bank with a link between the two banks. The bus bars love to corrode off, which disables any glow plugs downstream of the break.