Good stuff. I know a thing or two about this as well since I have been (foolishly? :P) designing and building my own P38 BeCM replacement from scratch. The final design runs on COTS arduino's (cheap and abundant, well that was before qualcomm anyway) that can very easily be swapped out and in turn control a large PCB which operates the heavy stuff. A design cue we took from the actual land rover unitIt (even for it's age) already uses a very modern component still in use in cars today: High Side Switches. I have run these through hell and back on a custom PCB and I can confirm you need quite a sturdy design and over speccing is king.
https://www.farnell.com/datasheets/64200.pdf
as can be seen the units are designed to operate between -40 and +150c which is quite a broad range already. I may have put my range to that test already when I went to the north cape in winterthe iso specced load rating is 11A which in a car of this age is more than enough for nearly everything. After all, high beam on old skool halogens is 55watts at 12v which makes for less than 5 amps.
Automotive is hard and it is certainly expensive. I paid 6,- (euros) PER high side switch and you need one for everything you switch. left light, right light, brake left, brake right etc etc etc. Of course a car manufacturer gets better prices by far but the design and testing costs PER unit exceed 50k with ease.
-P


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It (even for it's age) already uses a very modern component still in use in cars today: High Side Switches. I have run these through hell and back on a custom PCB and I can confirm you need quite a sturdy design and over speccing is king.
the iso specced load rating is 11A which in a car of this age is more than enough for nearly everything. After all, high beam on old skool halogens is 55watts at 12v which makes for less than 5 amps. 
Also, the blowers run on their own motor controllers which are actively cooled since they sit in the airflow of the fan (a very old and very common design)

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