Thanks, that's handy to know.
The transmission fault is due to the Engine ECM dropping the bus comms when it faults. It’s a communication fault when the other modules don’t hear what they are expecting to hear in a relatively (a couple of seconds) short timeout. Often it’ll also cascade to the terrain response and park brake. If you can restart (key off / key on) within a couple of seconds of the initial fault it’ll reset and not propagate to the other modules.
D4 MY16 TDV6 - Cambo towing magic, Traxide Batteries, X Lifter, GAP ID Tool, Snorkel, Mitch Hitch, Clearview Mirrors, F&R Dashcams, CB
RRC MY95 LSE Vogue Softdash "Bessie" with MY99 TD5 and 4HP24 transplants
SADLY SOLD MY04 D2a TD5 auto and MY10 D4 2.7 both with lots of goodies
Okay so after the kind help of a fellow LR enthusiast I got the code
PCM-Engine Diesel 2.7L
-UNKNOWN-00 (2D)
-UNKNOWN-00 (2D)
P0088-00 (68) Fuel rail/system pressure - too high
So next step is to see about getting it sorted as it’s starting to play up more now that I’m back in the city sitting in traffic it seems to act up. Thanks again for all the input.
.
A quick Google tells me that P0088 is high fuel pressure too high, and relayed to the fuel rail pressure sensor voltage. A failing high pressure fuel pump leads to a drop in fuel delivery pressure (as seen by the sensor) as more is bypassed through the pump and back to tank. I don't know what type of fuel pressure sensor the 2.7 runs, but given that code, that would be a point to start fault finding from.
As others have said, a hpfp fault usually gives a whole lot more cascade faults in other control modules.
Strongly suggest to take it to a reputable lr indy, or a diesel injection specialist.
This was the scan tool
Using IIDTool BT V3.0 B2742
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