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f1d094

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  1. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    Yes, and yes. At first I wasn't able to find someone who would sell me just one (I often have problems loading mouser.com, arrow.com, and any other edgesuite protected sites. I am a hacker/bot, apparently) but it looks like digikey just loaded for me and I can have for $14 incl shipping
  2. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    Things I wish I knew before I started! Next step will be to put everything back in place but leave the cover off the harness plug and do some wire-wiggling/tapping that way. Starting this way would have been the Pro-Move™ Live and learn...
  3. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    For future someone who also needs to disassemble their harness connector: MAKE A NOTE: that here are two long plastic retaining comb-clips that hold in ALL of the pins on each side. It doesn't look like it wants to fall out, but it is pretty loose and if it falls out all your unlabeled connectors are coming too Cut the zip tie and remove tape from the harness/connector Remove the small retaining screw located on the end of the connector by the hook/hinge Use a plastic spudger to run around the edges of the rubber gasket inside the connector Slide the cover away from the harness
  4. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    @Captain Obvious - When disassembling the harness connector one end of my gasket crumbled. You seem to have some quality Kung Fu in the electronics parts department. Any idea where I might find a replacement? I found this but no dice on the individual component.
  5. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    Oh? Do you mean above and beyond burning out the internals on the selector and high-beams swtiches? Do you think this is something to be concerned about now that my power draw has been dropped so much? GENIUS. I was literally just now chatting with my wife about how I can either make the female sides more grabby, or the male sides "fatter". Did not think of twisting to accomplish this. I will keep that one in the arsenal, thanks! Now I just need to get the harness connector disassembled and verify root cause. I already have a spare...which might actually be in the car now (ref. prior comment somewhere). I had an unrelated issue several years ago and put in a new one but the old one tested out great. Uncertain which is in the car now. If I remember I'll open the box in my parts bin and see who's hiding in there.
  6. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    Just a couple links for anyone who lands here in the future: https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/TE-Connectivity-AMP/282195-2?qs=tAlKl34sQZvipf6sMzAM1Q%3D%3D&srsltid=AfmBOopeu97zCLCKVjc6MLBwsS4YlfJZ3U0vIRUzRHNCUAktrArMAGhi https://www.te.com/en/product-282195-2.html
  7. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    I'm right there with you. Hence the disassembly of the harness and connector head. I am very very confident at this juncture that it is something in the head itself...so either a damaged connector, or worn out connector, or bad wire-to-connector crimp/solder. It has to be one of these things. There just isn't anythinge else in the car that would be affected by my tapping on the ECU. "When you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth."- Sherlock Holmes Wiggling the harness plug didn't do anything, almost certainly because it is so securely held in place to the ECU, and the ECU to the body. Tapping directly on the harness plug however had the most immediate and obvious effects. This is what made me think it was the "choke coils", their proximity to the most delicate "tap point", but that has now been elimiated. This leaves me with a "I'd bet $1000 USD" confidence level on it being something to do with the connector internals...and so I'm going to disassemble it and have a look. Since the pin receivers are where all the action is, I would think they would be the most likely culprit. I've unplugged the ECU only a handful of times in the 25 years I've owned the car...but who knows what the PO may have done. Now I'm all fired up. Maybe I'll do some re-arranging and find time during my evenings this week...
  8. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    Wow. That was fast. You should play Z-Car Jeopardy and rake in millions.
  9. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    I'm generally familiar with the brown-out condition the Z's ran under due to an undersized alternator or so it was explained to me when I replaced my headlight switch assembly... I addressed that a couple decades ago by installing a high output one. Also, during the pandemic, one of my projects was to convert the entire car to LEDs (minus the headlights), which dropped about 200W of load off the electrical. The headlights I was planning on doing very soon...but now that is clearly on hold until I have a drivable car again. ;)
  10. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    Not 111% certain on root cause yet, but 100% certain it isn't the ECU (cold solder joints or otherwise). The problem was very reproduceable previously by hitting the ECU hard enough at any time, not just when warm. During testing, I BEAT on the ECU with zero effect. What I did not do is whack the actual harness plug as planned, the pins simply were not secure enough. They did not slide out on their own, but any brushing of the wires in-situ would likely have caused them to slide out or lose contact. They were simply not tight at all. If you look in the photos closely you will see I have a rubberized tie-wrap wudged between the dual-bank wires to help them maintain contact. I don't have an official "pin drag" tool, nor do I have any pins that are the precise size of the ECU pins, except on my spare ECU...I tried a bit of googling about Bosch 35pin connectors to no avail but may revisit that. I should note though that the blade connectors I used are definitely thinner than those on the ECU. I had to really really push to get the female ends of the extensions on the ECU vs the harness connectors that could have been pushed in by an ambitious ant. At this point I have removed the 3 miles of electrical tape wrap that was over the rubber harness covering all the way down to the harness head. I did not have enough time to figure out how the harness head disassembles, so if anyone has one laying around and wants to give me some pointers that would be great. I've not had any time to give it a close look yet. The best I found was one for sale on EBay that has some useful photos. I have a large array of spudgers and other disassembly tools, so I'm sure I can get it apart, but it is always nice to have a look at the inside of what you are working on first. Old plastic is old. My biggest concern is that the problem might be an internal break in one of the wires that isn't discernable externally. Hopefully not though, all of the wires under the tape/rubber look like they were installed yesterday; they are that fresh and new. There is even some marking paint on them that is still pliable; mummies were less well preserved before burial. Another concern I have is when I get the casing open that all the individual connectors come flying out, leaving me to do wire-tracing to re-identify their homes. Hopefully they have individualized stays that are still in good shape. I don't know how I will tighten up / micro-crimp the female leads or if I will simply replace them. There isn't a lot of play in the harness so I am loathe to cut them shorter to get new ends on. I don't even know what these types of ends are called or if they even have a special name. I think they are the same as an injector plug and I have several spares of those, so next weekend I'll look into that. The adventure continues...
  11. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    RESULT: Loose harness connector(s). Now to figure out how to either tighten/tweak the harness connectors...or replace them 🫤 There is still a mystery (to me, at any rate) on why the engine would sometimes simply shut off like a switch and sometimes stutter-stop, and why sometimes it would re-start immediately and othertimes re-start 10-20 mins later. My hypothesis is that by simply getting in/out of the car while diagnosing I was re-wiggling the loose connector(s) such that they had good-enough connections, and the changing fault symptoms were a result of different pins or a different combo of pins losing contact. The end result is the same: Fix all the connections and do pin-drag tests on all of them to make sure they are sufficiently grabby. Thank you to everyone. I hope it was fun for you too.
  12. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    There was a solid clue during setup...when sliding the connectors into the harness...they are whisper-tight. Meaning: Not at all. Solid money is on worn out/loose harness connectors but we'll see if banging on ECU does anything after the normal "give up and die" timeframes of 20-40 mins.
  13. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    The test is still running for the next hour....but so far here is the score so far: Team "Replace ECU": 0 Team "NOT the ECU": 1 8.mov
  14. f1d094 replied to f1d094's topic in Fuel Injection
    That said, the test rig is ready to roll. Time for quick bite and then, ACTION!
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