What This FMI Means
FMI 26 is in the manufacturer-specific range. SAE J1939 reserves FMI values 26 through 30 for OEM use — each manufacturer assigns their own meaning to FMI 26 for their specific systems and conditions. There is no universal J1939 definition for this FMI value.
The source address in the fault code identifies which manufacturer's module is reporting FMI 26. FMI 26 from a Cummins engine controller (SA 0) has a Cummins-defined meaning. The same FMI 26 from an Allison transmission controller (SA 3), a Bendix ABS module, or a Detroit engine has a completely different, separately defined meaning.
How It Appears With SPN Codes
FMI 26 appears on both standard J1939 SPNs and on manufacturer-proprietary SPNs, wherever the OEM has chosen to use a manufacturer-specific FMI to describe a particular condition. The fault code display in OEM diagnostic software will show a text description of the condition for the specific SPN/FMI 26 combination.
Generic scan tools that decode standard J1939 may show "manufacturer-specific" or no description for FMI 26 on proprietary SPNs. The OEM diagnostic software — Cummins Insite, Detroit DiagnosticLink, Allison DOC, Eaton ServiceRanger, or Bendix ACOM Pro depending on the source module — provides the full code description and the OEM's guided diagnostic procedure.
How to Approach Diagnosis
Open the appropriate OEM diagnostic software and read the full description of the SPN/FMI 26 combination. The OEM software translates the manufacturer-specific code into a diagnostic description and guided procedure. Do not attempt to interpret FMI 26 without this OEM reference.
Note the source address (SA) before beginning diagnosis. The SA identifies which module is reporting and therefore which manufacturer's definition of FMI 26 applies. The same FMI value reported from SA 0 (engine ECM) and SA 3 (transmission controller) will have different meanings that lead to completely different diagnostic paths.
What Drivers Should Record
Record the full fault code including the source address. For manufacturer-specific FMIs, the source address is more important than usual because it determines which OEM definition applies and which diagnostic tool is required.
Note any operational symptoms — derate level, warning lamp description, system limitation — and when the code first appeared. Providing the technician with the full code plus source address and a symptom description allows them to look up the OEM procedure and prepare the correct diagnostic tool before beginning work.
Related Pages
Sources
- SAE J1939 Standards Collection SAE International · official · accessed 2026-05-05 · confidence medium
Source: SAE International, SAE J1939 Standards Collection. This page paraphrases factual fields only and is not a substitute for the original document.
Open source - NHTSA Manufacturer Communications Search National Highway Traffic Safety Administration · government · accessed 2026-05-05 · confidence high
Source: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, NHTSA Manufacturer Communications Search. This page paraphrases factual fields only and is not a substitute for the original document.
Open source
FAQ
FMI 26 is listed as manufacturer-specific — which OEM reference defines it?
FMI values from 26 through 30 are reserved for manufacturer-specific use. The meaning is defined by the OEM whose module reported the fault, not by the SAE J1939 standard. Cummins, Detroit Diesel, Allison, Eaton, and other manufacturers assign their own interpretations to these FMI values for their proprietary diagnostic logic. The OEM diagnostic software and service information are the only authoritative sources for FMI 26 definitions.
Can I find FMI 26 in a generic J1939 reference, or do I need the OEM service tool?
Generic J1939 references do not define FMI 26's meaning beyond identifying it as manufacturer-specific. The OEM diagnostic software — Cummins Insite, Detroit DiagnosticLink, Allison DOC, Eaton ServiceRanger, or Bendix ACOM Pro depending on the system — will provide the specific description, fault code text, and diagnostic procedure for that manufacturer's use of FMI 26 on the SPN in question.
Does a manufacturer-specific FMI like FMI 26 indicate a more or less serious condition than a standard FMI?
Severity is unrelated to whether the FMI is standardized or manufacturer-specific. FMI 26 can represent anything from a minor informational event to a critical protection condition, depending on the OEM's implementation. Do not assume manufacturer-specific FMIs are less important than standard FMI values — their significance is defined by the OEM and varies by SPN.