You don’t have enough information to make a definitive judgement on which of the three candidate components (wiring, TC motor, TCCM) might be the culprit. If the wiring is OK, then the GM engineers who wrote the shop manual think the TC motor is next most likely.Fless and Fuvar0715 thank you for your replies. Fless are you saying the issue is in the encoder motor assembly? I am confused with the order of operation so I am getting hung up on if the issue is with the encoder motor, the transfer case control module, or the selector switch. If you’re feeling is that it’s the motor assembly then I will go with your educated guess and I appreciate you sharing the knowledge. Fubar0715 I am located in just west of Boston. Not sure how to add that into my profile but I will look into it. Thanks again for all of the info and if anyone else has anything to add, please post. Thanks again.
If you want to be sure which component will fix the problem, you need to follow the diagnostics outlined above.
Most of the harness likely is not the problem, but the short leg that goes to the motor itself is under the chassis and routed pretty close to the FW drive shaft, so might could get chafed/cut.
The next candidate in the test protocol is in your the TC Motor. If neither the wiring or the TC Motor are bad, then the book says it is the TCCM.
As Fless pointed out, you can do the test steps above to get an exact determination, shotgun parts replacement or take it to a competent shop that does a lot of GM LT work and they will get it fixed in a few hours or less.
I think if there are no obvious issues with the portion of the harness going to the motor, a shotgun approach of first installing a replacement TC Motor and if that doesn’t fix it replace the TCCM, probably would yield a successful result. The problem with that approach is you don’t have a scan tool that can do the motor relearn (which might not be a big deal if you get the motor and TC in synch and the state the TCCM thinks things are in, are compatible).
If you buy a new TC motor and TCCM, again, you may need the motor relearn and it would be really nice to have the calibrations appropriate for your VIN flashed into your TCCM.
All that points to it being a good idea to take it to a qualified shop, or maybe using the extra money you will pay a shop for their equipment and know how and buy your own Tech 2 and maybe a DMM.