1 — Data Valid But Below Normal Operational Range - Most Severe
J1939 diagnostic trouble code reference.
FMI 1 is a J1939 diagnostic code defined under the SAE J1939 standard used by heavy-duty Class 7 and 8 commercial vehicles for on-board diagnostics over the CAN bus. Measured value is below the lowest permissible limit; system or component failure likely The fault sits in the engine system, so the typical service path is targeted inspection of that subsystem before broader troubleshooting. This page summarizes what FMI 1 means in plain English, common causes when documented, the standard 5-step diagnostic flow, and any FMCSA roadside-inspection violations that cite this code.
- Code:
- 1
- System:
- J1939
- Category:
- engine
- Severity:
- High severity
Severity classification
1 is classified as High severity (critical).
Meaning
What this fault code indicates.
Typical Symptoms
Driver-observable indications commonly associated with this code.
- parameter extremely low
- system shutdown possible
- immediate attention required
Related Codes
Codes commonly diagnosed alongside this one or sharing the same code family.
How to diagnose 1
- Confirm the code is current, not historical. Use a scan tool to read both Active and Historical (or Inactive / Logged) codes. FMI 1 matters most when it appears in the Active list. Historical-only codes can reflect a one-off event that has already cleared.
- Note any other codes set at the same time. Pull the full list of codes the ECM is reporting and write down which ones share a Freeze Frame timestamp with FMI 1. A simultaneous failure pattern often points to the root cause faster than any single code in isolation.
- Check the most-common cause for this code. Before replacing parts, check the most-common cause for this code (start with the simplest root causes — wiring, connector corrosion, sensor failure — before replacing larger components). The "Common causes" panel on this page lists the established root causes when we have published data — when it is empty, fall back to the OEM service manual or a licensed diagnostic database.
- Inspect the relevant component. Physically inspect the engine subsystem: connector pins, wiring harness, ground straps, and sensor body for damage, corrosion, or contamination. Many DTCs are wiring or connector faults rather than failed components.
- If unsure, take to a qualified diagnostic technician. If the code returns after repair, or if the actual fault is not obvious from the inspection, escalate to a shop with the proper licensed scan tool for the vehicle (heavy-duty trucks need a J1939-aware tool, not a generic OBD-II reader). Replacing parts based on the code alone is the most common cause of repeat repair costs.
Frequently asked questions about 1
What does FMI 1 mean? ▾
Is FMI 1 a serious problem? ▾
Can I drive with FMI 1 active? ▾
What's the typical cost to fix FMI 1? ▾
Will FMI 1 cause an emissions failure? ▾
How is FMI 1 different from related codes? ▾
Where can I find the official spec for FMI 1? ▾
What inspection violations might cite FMI 1? ▾
Related pages
Related
Data sources & freshness
TruckCodex aggregates official public-sector datasets. See the Source registry for dataset-level coverage and the Freshness log for last-import timestamps.
Census, SAFER, SMS, Licensing & Insurance (L&I), roadside inspections, crashes, and authority history.
Vehicle recall campaigns, defect investigations, and consumer safety complaints (SCRS).
Cross-border carrier registry and Canadian recall campaigns where applicable.
TruckCodex is an independent aggregator; it is not affiliated with FMCSA, NHTSA, EIA, or Transport Canada. Always verify compliance-critical information directly with the originating agency.