6 — Current Above Normal or Grounded Circuit
J1939 diagnostic trouble code reference.
FMI 6 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. Electrical current is above normal operating range - possible short to ground The fault sits in the electrical system, so the typical service path is targeted inspection of that subsystem before broader troubleshooting. This page summarizes what FMI 6 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:
- 6
- System:
- J1939
- Category:
- electrical
- Severity:
- High severity
Severity classification
6 is classified as High severity.
Meaning
What this fault code indicates.
Typical Symptoms
Driver-observable indications commonly associated with this code.
- excessive current draw
- short circuit
- blown fuse risk
Related Codes
Codes commonly diagnosed alongside this one or sharing the same code family.
How to diagnose 6
- Confirm the code is current, not historical. Use a scan tool to read both Active and Historical (or Inactive / Logged) codes. FMI 6 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 6. 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 electrical 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 6
What does FMI 6 mean? ▾
Is FMI 6 a serious problem? ▾
Can I drive with FMI 6 active? ▾
What's the typical cost to fix FMI 6? ▾
Will FMI 6 cause an emissions failure? ▾
How is FMI 6 different from related codes? ▾
Where can I find the official spec for FMI 6? ▾
What inspection violations might cite FMI 6? ▾
Related pages
Related
Data sources & freshness
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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.
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