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Yes, yesssssss, let the hatred flow through you




themagellan wrote:
Yes, yesssssss, let the hatred flow through you
Marc wrote:could be a failed driver in the ecu sending a ground to the relay when it shouldn't. test with a multimeter.
A4V8swap wrote:Marc wrote:could be a failed driver in the ecu sending a ground to the relay when it shouldn't. test with a multimeter.
Would that still be able to happen with no power to the ECU though? I will get out there and test it tomorrow.
Marc wrote:A4V8swap wrote:Marc wrote:could be a failed driver in the ecu sending a ground to the relay when it shouldn't. test with a multimeter.
Would that still be able to happen with no power to the ECU though? I will get out there and test it tomorrow.
yes.
one symptom of a failed injector driver is it will stick to ground at all times. powered or not.
my2000apb wrote:you went through all the work with the IC to make the latch work and now you hoodpin it?!?!?
we could make you a sexy exhaust!!!
Ordered some Aerocatch hood pins that I will be installing also.

themagellan wrote:Crazy to think this car was another 10 seconds away from burning completely to the ground, to now running and driving and shooting for 400+wheel.
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vt10vt wrote:The best way to diagnose it would be to pull the ECU and test continuity between the fuel pump relay ground pin and an external ECU ground pin. If you have continuity with everything unplugged it's the pump driver in the ECU, I would guess that's a PNP transistor or something similar.
If you don't have continuity there then it's in your wiring somewhere. Good luck!
vt10vt wrote:I dont know vems as well as a lot of others but not sure which pins youre looking at. Google vems pin out (and ideally your specific ecu model if you know) but from my quick search it seems pin 15 of the big connector is consistently the fuel pump relay. The injector drivers have nothing to do with the fuel pump driver. The pump driver has its own circuit triggered by the cpu when it sees rpm signals.
It seems to me pin 26 of that same connector is a good bet for an ecu ground so check 15-26. It should either be open (0ohm) or infinite ie no continuity.
There is essentially a small relay in the ecu that grounds the fuel pump relay. The driver in the ecu opens a path from pin 15 to the ecu's internal ground plane, so if you unplug the vems unit and have continuity between these pins it means that driver is leaving the path from the fuel pump relay open to ground thus running the
pump constantly.
A4V8swap wrote:vt10vt wrote:I dont know vems as well as a lot of others but not sure which pins youre looking at. Google vems pin out (and ideally your specific ecu model if you know) but from my quick search it seems pin 15 of the big connector is consistently the fuel pump relay. The injector drivers have nothing to do with the fuel pump driver. The pump driver has its own circuit triggered by the cpu when it sees rpm signals.
It seems to me pin 26 of that same connector is a good bet for an ecu ground so check 15-26. It should either be open (0ohm) or infinite ie no continuity.
There is essentially a small relay in the ecu that grounds the fuel pump relay. The driver in the ecu opens a path from pin 15 to the ecu's internal ground plane, so if you unplug the vems unit and have continuity between these pins it means that driver is leaving the path from the fuel pump relay open to ground thus running the
pump constantly.
It's a PnP so its the same as a 3b 200. That's why I was using Pin3 off the engine harness side. The Pin numbers I was referring to are off the relay by the battery for the fuel pump.
Okay so I will start with pin 15 this time and check for continuity. I see pin 15 being injector number 3 signal though on SJM?
http://www.sjmautotechnik.com/trouble_s ... 0vpin.html
