The car in question was a 2005 D3 HSE TDV6, the fault started as an intermitent one but over the space of a couple of weeks it eventually failed altogether.
After a little digging I found the remote keys can fail after 5-7 years approx, they recharge themselves when in the ignition and the engine is running. The battery can fail and are not supposed to be changed. Batterys are available on eBay and if your brave enough to cut the key open and re-solder a new battery in it is possible and saves you £150 + £50 programming for a new key. I managed it but still no joy.
I searched the internet some more and found information on a wiring loom issue. The accuracy on the subject is a little bit wooley to say the least, diffrent people were finding diffrent locations, diffrent colour tape etc etc, all relivent when trying to find a needle in hay stack.
This is what I found and how I did it;
Firstly remove second row interior lighting to uncover the reciver in the head lining, you have to find a small green wire with a white tracer plugged into it, you need to see if there is a constant 12v supply upto this with the key removed from the ignition. I did not find one.
The next step is to remove the sill trim on the N/S then the plastic cover which protects the loom from beneath it. This will uncover the main loom. The offending part is or was on mine, about halfway along the passenger seat.
You need to remove the binding tape which holds the loom together, and try and open up or spread the wires as much as possible. Your looking for a black piece of plastic approx 2inch and very narrow with 3 green wires with a white tracer going into it at only one end, nothing comes out the other.
I then used a stanley blade and removed a little bit of the coating to allow access with a voltmeter. Check all 3 wires, they must read 12v as the plastic splice just joins them. Mine were reading only 1.5v on 2 of them and 12v+ on the other.
Cut the black plastic off, strip back all three wires and then solder them together. Obviousley you need to protect from earthing as they are live.
From that point on the remote locking has worked perfectly.
I have two images of the wire and its location.
The reason I think this happens is water ingress, my heap was soaked and had a rather large puddle right were teh looms lies....
Doing this job yourself will save you a fortune and if your a handy DIY'r then I think its quite easy once you know what your doing with it.
Cheers
Chris
After a little digging I found the remote keys can fail after 5-7 years approx, they recharge themselves when in the ignition and the engine is running. The battery can fail and are not supposed to be changed. Batterys are available on eBay and if your brave enough to cut the key open and re-solder a new battery in it is possible and saves you £150 + £50 programming for a new key. I managed it but still no joy.
I searched the internet some more and found information on a wiring loom issue. The accuracy on the subject is a little bit wooley to say the least, diffrent people were finding diffrent locations, diffrent colour tape etc etc, all relivent when trying to find a needle in hay stack.
This is what I found and how I did it;
Firstly remove second row interior lighting to uncover the reciver in the head lining, you have to find a small green wire with a white tracer plugged into it, you need to see if there is a constant 12v supply upto this with the key removed from the ignition. I did not find one.
The next step is to remove the sill trim on the N/S then the plastic cover which protects the loom from beneath it. This will uncover the main loom. The offending part is or was on mine, about halfway along the passenger seat.
You need to remove the binding tape which holds the loom together, and try and open up or spread the wires as much as possible. Your looking for a black piece of plastic approx 2inch and very narrow with 3 green wires with a white tracer going into it at only one end, nothing comes out the other.
I then used a stanley blade and removed a little bit of the coating to allow access with a voltmeter. Check all 3 wires, they must read 12v as the plastic splice just joins them. Mine were reading only 1.5v on 2 of them and 12v+ on the other.
Cut the black plastic off, strip back all three wires and then solder them together. Obviousley you need to protect from earthing as they are live.
From that point on the remote locking has worked perfectly.
I have two images of the wire and its location.
The reason I think this happens is water ingress, my heap was soaked and had a rather large puddle right were teh looms lies....
Doing this job yourself will save you a fortune and if your a handy DIY'r then I think its quite easy once you know what your doing with it.
Cheers
Chris