P38A My first EAS Fun

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Thanks Marty, I had seen reference to a connector in the kick panel but I hadn't taken the time to look in Rave to see exactly what runs through there. Entirely my fault, I'll take a look at that connector as soon as I get chance.

Noted on the OBD!

The replacement ECU idea is more about tweaking / more info / easier diagnostics than it is 'fixing' the current ECU. I'm a software developer / tinkerer, it's in my nature to attach computers to things and see what I can make them do!

Thanks for the useful info, I'll have a shufty at that connector, replace the delay timer and see what I get
 
Thanks Marty, I had seen reference to a connector in the kick panel but I hadn't taken the time to look in Rave to see exactly what runs through there. Entirely my fault, I'll take a look at that connector as soon as I get chance.

Noted on the OBD!

The replacement ECU idea is more about tweaking / more info / easier diagnostics than it is 'fixing' the current ECU. I'm a software developer / tinkerer, it's in my nature to attach computers to things and see what I can make them do!

Thanks for the useful info, I'll have a shufty at that connector, replace the delay timer and see what I get

Maybe you should have listened and you would have got to that a lot earlier.
 
Update:

Replaced the ECU with one off Ebay, and suspension works fine now. All the heights seem there or there abouts, not tried plugging into it yet with the unlock suite.

The homemade ECU is also going pretty well, got a nice dashboard with the readings from the height sensors, the status of the compressor and all the valves etc, going to mount that in the car somewhere so I can keep an eye on it and see what the standard ECU does before starting to work on the logic. I just need to source a male and female connector 35 pin connector without paying out £50 for an 'ECU bypass wiring harness' off Ebay so I can plug my wires in without splicing into the existing loom.
 
The homemade ECU is also going pretty well, got a nice dashboard with the readings from the height sensors, the status of the compressor and all the valves etc, going to mount that in the car somewhere so I can keep an eye on it and see what the standard ECU does before starting to work on the logic.

Great stuff - it would be good to see photos or a video. I understand those who say that standard system works well if properly maintained, but a Plan B is always good to have!

Pete
 
Update:

Replaced the ECU with one off Ebay, and suspension works fine now. All the heights seem there or there abouts, not tried plugging into it yet with the unlock suite.

The homemade ECU is also going pretty well, got a nice dashboard with the readings from the height sensors, the status of the compressor and all the valves etc, going to mount that in the car somewhere so I can keep an eye on it and see what the standard ECU does before starting to work on the logic. I just need to source a male and female connector 35 pin connector without paying out £50 for an 'ECU bypass wiring harness' off Ebay so I can plug my wires in without splicing into the existing loom.
Brilliant, this kind of curiousity will help to keep our buses running in the future when supplies begin to run scarce.
Just look at the rsw suite he designed.
Keep it up that man:cool:
 
It runs on a raspberry pi, and I have the standard touchscreen plugged into it..... but you could connect to it from any device with a browser :)

I'll be watching developments with interest. I think the original dedicated unit is probably safer than a £20 pi unit or God forbid, anything to do with Windows, especially given something as important as suspension but definitely an interesting project. Might be worth emailing Storey Wilson. He does reply ... Eventually.
 
Yeah, I've got a working original unit now, so less pressure to get something working on the pi..... first step will just be to monitor what the original unit does, so logging all the sensors and valves whenever they change so I can see what's triggering what and putting it on a smaller screen mounted in the car somewhere.

Might have to wait a while though, I've got MOT dependant stuff to fix first :)
 
Good morning,

Quite interested in your project, can you explain a little bit more how it is made up and designed?
 
Sure, it's a raspberry pi for the brains connected to an Arduino Uno for the inputs / outputs.

I'm using node-red on the pi to read the various inputs and display the dashboard.

And that's pretty much it so far! I've had to put it on the back burner for now while I sort other issues.
 
Thanks,

I have been looking at the Arduino myself and I am going to pick up a starter kit for fun. I have some bouncing issues with my car and I am going to start off by building a way to monitor whats going on. Seems like its possible to do this (and really build a new EASECU) with only the Arduino.

I will link up when I have started.
 
The height sensors are all 5v, so they'll plug straight into the analogue inputs on an Arduino (the uno has 5 of them). The valves & compressor relays require 12v to switch them on, so you need some sort of optoisolater or a current sensor to monitor those.

My main blocker at the moment is sourcing the 35 pin connector so I can make a pass through type setup rather than butchering the existing wiring loom
 
The height sensors are all 5v, so they'll plug straight into the analogue inputs on an Arduino (the uno has 5 of them). The valves & compressor relays require 12v to switch them on, so you need some sort of optoisolater or a current sensor to monitor those.

My main blocker at the moment is sourcing the 35 pin connector so I can make a pass through type setup rather than butchering the existing wiring loom
The solenoids pick with 12 volts and then are held with with a lower voltage that is pulsed. Leave 12 volts on them and they will burn.
 
The solenoids pick with 12 volts and then are held with with a lower voltage that is pulsed. Leave 12 volts on them and they will burn.

Yep true. It's amazing how he can contemplate this but not be able to work out which wires operate his door lock.
 
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