tomcat59alan
Well-Known Member
Think I told you some time ago I threw an ecu for an XJS n the scrap I knew at the time it would"come in handy"I need an ECU and loom for that first. Megasquirt cannot handle 12 cylinders.
Think I told you some time ago I threw an ecu for an XJS n the scrap I knew at the time it would"come in handy"I need an ECU and loom for that first. Megasquirt cannot handle 12 cylinders.
Think I told you some time ago I threw an ecu for an XJS n the scrap I knew at the time it would"come in handy"
Can you remember what you were looking for in the bin for me when all the neighbours came out to see what you were doing?Too late to go digging in the bin now.
Can you remember what you were looking for in the bin for me when all the neighbours came out to see what you were doing?
Which connector to which bit of loom? I'll check this on mine!Had this been remedied? Along with every fault known to man and on landyzone's r us, I've had this very same problem. Every step seemed to solve it momentarily just as above. It turned out to be the wiring inside the moulded connector to the loom. A pure fluke showed it up. I effected a temporary repair with a connector block which, thus far, had turned out to be permanent.
Sounds like the identical issue to mineAnd........the fault is back.
It reappeared directly after a long drive in pouring rain the other week.
NANOCOM says "No faults Found", nothing in the faults log on the ECU, no "clues" available.
Looked at the "at rest" volts on the sensors with NANOCOM and all are the same at 2.32 or 2.33Volts.
I have (in the past) swapped the L & R front sensors over and the fault has moved to the new location of the failed sensor (i.e. from OSF to NSF).I bought a used ecu off ebay as a backup incase mine ever broked. I had that same error and concluded the ecu was duff. Got money back no quibble, seller didn't ask for the ecu back so assume he knew it was duff and was trying his luck
I hope you didn't destroy the old one first!Lovely warm and dry day today.
Let me tell you how the ABS Sensor replacement went.
Popped the bonnet, pulled the connector, stuck the Multimeter across the sensor, "Open Circuit" - as expected.
Chock wheels, jack car up a bit loosen wheel nuts. Jack up a lot more place axle stand under axle tube, remove wheel.
Go looking for the new sensor. Not in the car, not in my study, not in the kitchen. The box has just "vanished".
..........
"Honey, where's that square box that was here on the end of the worktop with my new ABS sensor in it?"
"Oh, I thought it was empty, I threw it out with the recycling rubbish that was collected this morning, sorry."
God give me strength.