Jump to content

What makes you grin? Antidote to grumpy thread


Recommended Posts

Posted

The Legacy has developed a slight exhaust blow, I prefer it.

  • Like 2
Posted

Reply: Sorry mate, none in stock. Try Autoshite!

  • Like 2
Posted

Got the green ZXs V5 through the post today, which is nice.

 

But just noticed that both ZXs previous owners acquired their cars on 31st May, one 2015, one 2016.

 

WTF

Posted

They figured out all the good stuff ages ago like petrol engines, torque converters, springs, tyres and the like They're just nobbing around coming up with useless features to rent to tech hungry numpties like radar guided cup holders, night vision gear knobs and air conditioned tyres.

 

 

 

 

E.F.A.

Posted

post-17481-0-10650600-1473265022_thumb.png

Saw a blue one of these this morning; local suffix plate, well used but tidy, absolutely standard, even had the toothed Toyota mud flaps; at work and carrying stuff.

 

Because they are now so rare and I am a van nerd I checked mot history for the mileage. Mileometer broken.

post-17481-0-67854900-1473265000_thumb.png

 

The grin is that it still exists, is used, mot history shows zero fails + the advisory for preventative maintenance and that it was registered 34 years ago today.

Posted

Just recieved a '79 Ford range brochure to fill a small gap in my collection.

0f43e7fb4c309c49ec57782abea94a00.jpg

It's distinctly pornographic, of course, but what caused me at least a muted chuckle was the sticker on the front cover

227fa31301b0fd28073e70d4bb9b5279.jpg

It seems Ford forecasted scene tax almost 40 years ago.

 

Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk

  • Like 5
Posted

I was doing a bit of troubleshooting today at work. A customer has a bus that won't crank over.

 

Anyway, if you think modern car electrics are mental, get ready for this one:

 

Instead of a switch attached to a wire going to the starter solenoid:

 

 

The start button sends a physical (negative switched) pulse to an Input/Output unit (one of 5 or 6 identical ones on the bus). This encodes the signal into a data packet, which then travels over the Multibus network to the CAMU - the master on this particular network. If the CAMU is happy that the battery level isn't too low and the engine bay door is shut etc, it sends another data packet out to the dash clocks.

The dash clocks are a bridge between the Multibus "buttons and doors and lights" network to the proper J1939 network which is for the oily mechanical bits.

Anyway, this vehicle has a Mercedes engine, so instead of the engine ECU being on this network, it's got an ADM unit which is like the Mercedes "gateway" to the ECU at the front of the vehicle which picks up the signal from the throttle pedal and ignition and stuff.

So, this ADM receives a packet from the dashboard saying "start the engine". If it's happy with various things (oil level and stuff) then it'll send another data packet out on ANOTHER network - fault tolerant CAN this time. (It runs at higher voltage than normal CAN)

This data finally travels down some wires to the back of the bus and into the engine ECU where it's decoded back into a physical pulse, which then passes through for transistors in series with a current sensing resistor before finally making it's way to the starter solenoid.

 

I can't really believe this is the first time I've been asked for help with this.

The ECU does have a pin marked "Terminal 50, Starter in" but if you start it using that, the vehicle just runs at 1250RPM in limp mode and ignores the throttle pedal.

  • Like 3
Posted

The main issue in that system is the word Mercedes !

Have any of you guys ever worked in Belarus tractor electrics ? They start on 24v but charge and everything runs on 12 v ! Sounds simple but the Russian mechanical switching is mind blowing

Posted

Sounds a bit like a Jag XJ40 I was asked to adapt so it would start after a manual gearbox conversion.

Posted

Cobblers, that is insane, I'm sure whoever came up with that convoluted load of bollocks thought to ask the poor sods who operate/maintain them if they thought it was a good idea. I'm sure there must be a point to it, but it doesn't bode well for the small independent operators a few years down the line.

 

No doubt they will soon be adding the seat configuration technology mentioned above, so that potential passengers can adjust the seat that they are about to sit in before they get to it.

Posted

Just sold the Clio I have in stock - total marketing cost £16 which is far better than the £70 autotrader want!

Posted

I was doing a bit of troubleshooting today at work. A customer has a bus that won't crank over.

 

Anyway, if you think modern car electrics are mental, get ready for this one:

 

Instead of a switch attached to a wire going to the starter solenoid:

 

 

 

Because I could never get to the bottom of the random starter-not-working on my, my wifes, now mine again, Subaru Legacy

 

I fitted a metre of wire and a push-button. 

 

Up yours immobiliser/relays/can-bus/engine management module/body control module.

  • Like 3
Posted

I was doing a bit of troubleshooting today at work. A customer has a bus that won't crank over.

 

Anyway, if you think modern car electrics are mental, get ready for this one:

 

Instead of a switch attached to a wire going to the starter solenoid:

 

 

The start button sends a physical (negative switched) pulse to an Input/Output unit (one of 5 or 6 identical ones on the bus). This encodes the signal into a data packet, which then travels over the Multibus network to the CAMU - the master on this particular network. If the CAMU is happy that the battery level isn't too low and the engine bay door is shut etc, it sends another data packet out to the dash clocks.

The dash clocks are a bridge between the Multibus "buttons and doors and lights" network to the proper J1939 network which is for the oily mechanical bits.

Anyway, this vehicle has a Mercedes engine, so instead of the engine ECU being on this network, it's got an ADM unit which is like the Mercedes "gateway" to the ECU at the front of the vehicle which picks up the signal from the throttle pedal and ignition and stuff.

So, this ADM receives a packet from the dashboard saying "start the engine". If it's happy with various things (oil level and stuff) then it'll send another data packet out on ANOTHER network - fault tolerant CAN this time. (It runs at higher voltage than normal CAN)

This data finally travels down some wires to the back of the bus and into the engine ECU where it's decoded back into a physical pulse, which then passes through for transistors in series with a current sensing resistor before finally making it's way to the starter solenoid.

 

I can't really believe this is the first time I've been asked for help with this.

The ECU does have a pin marked "Terminal 50, Starter in" but if you start it using that, the vehicle just runs at 1250RPM in limp mode and ignores the throttle pedal.

Optare product per chance?

Posted

Cobblers, that is insane, I'm sure whoever came up with that convoluted load of bollocks thought to ask the poor sods who operate/maintain them if they thought it was a good idea.

 

It's all down to how the systems all were designed totally separately and were forced to work together.

 

The Merc stuff was originally on trucks and had a wire direct from the ignition to the starter terminal - the rest was "bonus comfort stuff" so it wasn't important for it to be all that robust.

The Actia/optare stuff originally was designed for Cummins engines with a +24v feed for the starter and no intercommunication between the dash and the doors/lights multibus network, so again it didn't need to be all that robust (and it really flipping isn't!)

Then they updated it because the newer euro4/5 merc engines prefer to be started just via the network.

 

 

TBH with three quarters of a brain and the diagnostics tackle, it's not that bad to deal with. But you'll need two different types of gear, both at 3-7k subscription per year. Only one of them is available knockoff on ebay for £50.

Posted

Optare product per chance?

Of course! Solo.

I love Solos! They're great. They pay for my car and house.

  • Like 2
Posted

Only one of them is available knockoff on ebay for £50.

Is the other one MBstar/DAS/Xentry?

Posted

I'm told the knockoff Delphi DS150 is good enough for the Merc stuff, We use a genuine one and it does what we need on the test bench.

It's the Actia multibus diagnostics for the body modules that's the real stinger because there's no cheap alternative and there's really no other way to work out whats wrong other than just throwing parts at it.

Posted

I wish you'd been the one to sort out why my car occasionally refused to start... ecu's can go to fuck!

Posted

Bloody immigrants steal all the good cars   :mrgreen:

 

post-2915-0-04926000-1473304628_thumb.jpg

 

post-2915-0-31796200-1473304639_thumb.jpg

 

 

  • Like 3
Posted

Went to a local Morrisons earlier to see if there was any old stuff parked up. Found a nice F reg 5 series.

I then went to leave, and came across a ratty 1991 Escort.

I then went to leave again, and came across a mint 405 GTX saloon.

I then went to leave again, and a nice Xantia parked up nearby. 

 

!!!

Posted

Recently moved 150 miles across the Severn for work. Now living somewhere with no car storage, where I know no-one interested in cars, and away from my friendly independents. This is not a grin.

The grin is I think I've found an amazing new garage to use. Father, son, wife does accounting, been there 40 years, father races mk1 Lotus Cortina's, the building smells of warm oil, dog and tea. The daily driver parked outside is a ratty e30 M325i. Being worked on - an early Mini Cooper and a mechanically straight but dowdy Humber Sceptre. Asking about getting some work done, their response- "Whenever is good for you, it's just the long termers in at the moment". The long termers being a mint-looking Lotus Espirit, a 40s Austin in pieces and something very low to the ground under a tarp.

 

I thought places like this didn't exist anymore!

Posted

This is my friend's racing car.

s-l1600.jpg

 

 

 

This is a replica of my friend's racing car.

http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/mgf-x-power-replica-car-mg-mgf-convertible-/152223947455

 

s-l1600.jpg

 

He's pretty chuffed about it as it's a sort of recognition to put on the massive pile of class win and sometimes race win trophies he's amassed from being a really very good driver.  He's a not a professional racer (he'd like to be), he's a professional mechanic who races in his spare time, sometimes for the garage he works for if they need a driver for their car.

Posted

Car insurance renewal sorted out today.  Time to switch, like it is every year.  I could have stayed with Admiral had a £36 a year saving, or I could jump ship and go with Tesco who were going to save me a whopping £170 a year.  That's a bit of a no-brainer.  I even keep the drive-other-cars option for just £305 a year on the Rover.  The Rover is nearly as cheap to insure on a regular policy now as the Princess is on a classic policy, it just keeps winning.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...