faulty BCM and or IDU??
#1
faulty BCM and or IDU??
Hi
My 2000 D2 has several electrical issues, front fog lights, interior lights (will work of the light switch but not any of the door switches, alarm, seat belt warning (warning light and alarm), Central locking locks and unlocks the doors with no indicator confirmation. All of these do not work.
Only audioable alarm is the head light on warning beeps.
I have looked at the wiring diagrams supplied by a couple of members (thanks) and all of these go through the BCM and IDU units.
is this a usual issue with one of the units and can they be repaired- dry solder joints etc??
What is the best way of checking if it is the BCM or IDU units ?/
Thanks
Justin
My 2000 D2 has several electrical issues, front fog lights, interior lights (will work of the light switch but not any of the door switches, alarm, seat belt warning (warning light and alarm), Central locking locks and unlocks the doors with no indicator confirmation. All of these do not work.
Only audioable alarm is the head light on warning beeps.
I have looked at the wiring diagrams supplied by a couple of members (thanks) and all of these go through the BCM and IDU units.
is this a usual issue with one of the units and can they be repaired- dry solder joints etc??
What is the best way of checking if it is the BCM or IDU units ?/
Thanks
Justin
#2
Not usual, while solder joints could be repaired, also can leave you with a vehicle that won't crank. The BCU and ECU exchange information before cranking can take place. If this is distrurbed, by erase of BCU stored memory, or substitution of an unmatched BCU, ECU will assume theft attempt in progress and become most uncooperative.
You can remove connectors from BCU and meters for proper activity. As an example, connector C660-04 (purple & light green) monitors all door switches except driver door. The units are all in parallel and any one of them when opened should ground that point. The driver door grounds C660-17.
Now if you have normal inputs to the BCU, that becomes a strong case for a replaced module, but you will need a advanced shop or dealer to handle programming. You may be able to swap ECU and BCU from a donor vehicle. Be sure hood switch is deprssed when re-connecting battery, the BCU could have been in armed state in the donor vehicle.
You can remove connectors from BCU and meters for proper activity. As an example, connector C660-04 (purple & light green) monitors all door switches except driver door. The units are all in parallel and any one of them when opened should ground that point. The driver door grounds C660-17.
Now if you have normal inputs to the BCU, that becomes a strong case for a replaced module, but you will need a advanced shop or dealer to handle programming. You may be able to swap ECU and BCU from a donor vehicle. Be sure hood switch is deprssed when re-connecting battery, the BCU could have been in armed state in the donor vehicle.
#3
I went through a similar ordeal almost immediately after buying my 99 D2, I engaged the alarm accidentally, and it would not disengage. It sat at the dealership for a month before they actually got it started and driving, and another three months to get the new non programed BCU from LR. The up side is that for at least a few months, everything about the truck worked. It even got rid of the amigos.
I hope your path to the fix is short.
N
I hope your path to the fix is short.
N
#4
Nearly all of your issues are programmable options within the BCU. The only odd one out is the interior lighting (assuming you mean overhead light).
Without the proper software it's going to be a difficult DIY diagnosis; but based on your above description it highly unlikely it's the IDM and all symptoms point to BCU.
Without the proper software it's going to be a difficult DIY diagnosis; but based on your above description it highly unlikely it's the IDM and all symptoms point to BCU.
#7