I found last year that my FBH doesn't work so I decided I would sort it when the weather warmed up and then of course I didn't do anything about it!
Last weekend I removed it and a friend of mine made a straight coupler for me from some brass stock on his lathe so that I could plumb it out for a while.
Beautiful isn't it?
The fault I have is "Glow plug short circuit to ground or open circuit" which I had researched and found that it can be faulty or the transistor can be a culprit but when I removed the heater and put a meter on the glow plug wiring I had a dead short so I decided to just bite the bullet and order the full service kit (about £105) including the glow plug which is the expensive bit and service the FBH properly. I stripped it down to find that it was actually really clean inside, of course the gaskets were ruined but I knew they would be so I cleaned it all out and got ready to rebuild it.
Curiosity got the better of me at this point so I tested the new glow plug with my meter and found I had about 0.3ohm resistance from memory, I checked the old one, it was the same... bugger! I shoved 12v up the old glow plug wiring and it worked a treat. Double bugger!
Ah well, I've bought the stuff now and opened the packet, I may as well go ahead so I rebuilt the FBH with all the new parts. I thought for a while about the pros and cons of refitting to test but decided to give it a go at lunchtime anyway as the sun was shining on that side of the car. Yeah, it didn't work! It did briefly attempt to start the cycle but then powered down again so I decided to plug in my GapIID to see what issue I had now expecting it to be the same.
To say that Gap was inconclusive is an understatement, according to it, I have every single component of my L322 in fault and I am not joking, it started with 40 ABS module faults, every part of the HVAC, transfer case, Instrument cluster, you name it! I cannot stress enough how bad it is according to GAP. I can clear them all and every single one comes straight back and they are all dated 13/5/2023. I gave up on that, I'll charge the battery as it only does short runs currently and revisit that issue another time so lets park that there for a moment.
Back to the FBH, Can anyone recommend a company that can test it for me or is anyone local is to Maidstone that I can bring it to for a look? I found Robinsonlabs website and videos, but I've emailed them and they haven't responded, they also don't have a phone number so I'm a bit sceptical about paying £70 and posting the circuit board in case they are no longer trading.
If it's the glow plug transistor at fault, I'd fairly happily replace it myself but I'm not good enough with electronics to know that I am testing it correctly and I don't have the diagnostic capabilities for this board so it would be guess work and that's not much good to me. Usually the transistor would have damage on it to see when they burn out and as you can see in this pic, mine looks to be in perfect health (I accept that looking like it and doing it are two very different things).
Last weekend I removed it and a friend of mine made a straight coupler for me from some brass stock on his lathe so that I could plumb it out for a while.
Beautiful isn't it?
The fault I have is "Glow plug short circuit to ground or open circuit" which I had researched and found that it can be faulty or the transistor can be a culprit but when I removed the heater and put a meter on the glow plug wiring I had a dead short so I decided to just bite the bullet and order the full service kit (about £105) including the glow plug which is the expensive bit and service the FBH properly. I stripped it down to find that it was actually really clean inside, of course the gaskets were ruined but I knew they would be so I cleaned it all out and got ready to rebuild it.
Curiosity got the better of me at this point so I tested the new glow plug with my meter and found I had about 0.3ohm resistance from memory, I checked the old one, it was the same... bugger! I shoved 12v up the old glow plug wiring and it worked a treat. Double bugger!
Ah well, I've bought the stuff now and opened the packet, I may as well go ahead so I rebuilt the FBH with all the new parts. I thought for a while about the pros and cons of refitting to test but decided to give it a go at lunchtime anyway as the sun was shining on that side of the car. Yeah, it didn't work! It did briefly attempt to start the cycle but then powered down again so I decided to plug in my GapIID to see what issue I had now expecting it to be the same.
To say that Gap was inconclusive is an understatement, according to it, I have every single component of my L322 in fault and I am not joking, it started with 40 ABS module faults, every part of the HVAC, transfer case, Instrument cluster, you name it! I cannot stress enough how bad it is according to GAP. I can clear them all and every single one comes straight back and they are all dated 13/5/2023. I gave up on that, I'll charge the battery as it only does short runs currently and revisit that issue another time so lets park that there for a moment.
Back to the FBH, Can anyone recommend a company that can test it for me or is anyone local is to Maidstone that I can bring it to for a look? I found Robinsonlabs website and videos, but I've emailed them and they haven't responded, they also don't have a phone number so I'm a bit sceptical about paying £70 and posting the circuit board in case they are no longer trading.
If it's the glow plug transistor at fault, I'd fairly happily replace it myself but I'm not good enough with electronics to know that I am testing it correctly and I don't have the diagnostic capabilities for this board so it would be guess work and that's not much good to me. Usually the transistor would have damage on it to see when they burn out and as you can see in this pic, mine looks to be in perfect health (I accept that looking like it and doing it are two very different things).