I can't answer your question, but if I was a betting man my money would be on the BCU before the ECU as it is the BCU that controls it.
Yes the EKA code. Sorry for the very basic explanation.
So, could a dodgy BCU cause this. Or a dodgy computer? Both maybe?
Id rather melt a piston than diagnose this oneWhen I get to the cause I hope it helps others out. No one likes being trapped in a disco on a 40deg C day with an alarm blaring and 50 dogs yapping. Im still on manual key entry until my nanocom arrives.
Just to add, I have a remapped NNN to install after i enter some security codes or something?, thinking this could be a potential get out of jail free card if my computer is on its way out...
I can't answer your question, but if I was a betting man my money would be on the BCU before the ECU as it is the BCU that controls it.
Dave.
I was asked " Is it ignorance or apathy?" I replied "I don't know and I don't care."
1983 RR gone (wish I kept it)
1996 TDI ES.
2003 TD5 HSE
1987 Isuzu County
OK so manual unlocking didnt work this time, the alarm went off again so I just manually locked the door again to hush it up. Now heres the strangest thing. I came back 1/2 hour later and when I got to within 10m of the disco my headlights turned on by themselves. I walked up an noone was inside it and it was locked. I manually unlocked and locked the door and the lights turned off as it locked.
Im clueless, did it pick up a RF signal when my fob was in range?
You need a nanocom and look at the bcu, even delete all the keys and start again. Theres a detect function use it for a key you know works with a new 2032 battery (2016 is too thin). Even if the bcu needs replacing you'll need a nanocom to set the bcu to the ecu (they're a paired thing. Wreckers will say you need to buy them as a set to rip more $$$). Saying that I've never had a bcu die yet where i couldn't get keys to work again by deletion and reloading.
The headlights will turn on if you press and hold the lock button, called a garage feature or something. Allows you to see your way to the front door at night. Can go.off in your pocket.
It seems that the first presumption that the fob has some intermittent internal short might be spot on though cos as said the receiver picked up a long lock signal from the fob and the BCU activated the courtesy headlight feature, so IMO for the BCU it was exactly like when you keep the lock button pushed longer, which means the receiver works well...that's why it drained the weaker batteries so fast and it might drain the good one faster too
don't you have the second fob to test it?
Discovery Td5 (2000), manual, tuned
Only have 1 fob unfortunately.
I would try a new key fob first. If sierrafery's theory proved right it would be the cheapest option. If it turned out to be something else, you will have a spare for you finally get it sorted.
Dave.
I was asked " Is it ignorance or apathy?" I replied "I don't know and I don't care."
1983 RR gone (wish I kept it)
1996 TDI ES.
2003 TD5 HSE
1987 Isuzu County
Yeah good point. Thanks.
Suggest you check the fob thoroughly. May have a faulty Micro Switch transmitting "Lock" function. Appears when you approached vehicle either the Lock micro switch was "On" or you had your finger on the lock button which turned the headlights on.
Check the Fob battery voltage at the contacts, not just the battery.
Regards
Harry
I hadnt looked at the fob battery connectons... the fob is starting to loose the buttons so a slight tap could trigger the lock function, i hope thats the culprit in this case. Ive ordered another shell a while ago but still waiting on it to turn up.
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