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- Buckinghamshire, UK. ('95 DT)
The Faultmate is Vin locked, as regards sorting out the original Becm, i think i would have to send it to the UK and that means it would be off the road for quite a while. There are a couple of electronics places over here, but given all the headaches i have read about, i'm not sure i would want somebody who doesn't know what they're doing have a look as i may end up just digging a deeper hole.
If i swap over the logic boards, would i not be in the same boat? as i would think the logic board would probably control the immobiliser. I have read on the internet about soldering in a plug that gives direct access to the control microprocessor and allows it to be unlocked (Sm035), does anybody have the pinouts for the plug so that i can make one myself? Also is my MSV Extreme likely to have the appropriate software installed to allow me to overwrite the settings? Anybody on here done it?
I meant take the logic board with the valid immobiliser code in it out of the (presumed) broken BECM and put it in the BECM with the working power board. All should work as before then. You can reset the immobiliser code with Nanocom or Faultmate easily enough. The BECM has a load of little bolts on top. Undo them and there are 2 boards inside. Cannot remember which is which now but 1 is the logic board. Nothing special required to get it out. You can read the chip with the data an using an appropriate socket (EEPROM?) reader and scraping the protective lacquer off the pins and pushing the socket against the pins to make contact.
BECMs do fail but it is rare. Usually they just go out of sync with the engine ECU. Marty can repair some or Rick-The-Pick is the undisputed BECM God.