Help! F355 ABS Gremlins (one for the electrical gurus) | Page 3 | FerrariChat

Help! F355 ABS Gremlins (one for the electrical gurus)

Discussion in '348/355' started by galactica1971, May 3, 2020.

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  1. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    This assumes the ECU is providing power, but not enough to light a lamp, right? Thanks I'll go and try all of the above now.

    Fuses are fine. That was the first thing I checked. Fingers crossed.
     
  2. Qavion

    Qavion F1 World Champ
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  3. yelcab

    yelcab F1 World Champ
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    Amen.
     
  4. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    OK so it lights a lamp no problem. Tried tapping it, no go. Not a sound.

    I havent actually fed it live power yet, but that's a bit tough for me as I don't have a reliable 12vdc power source for it...
     
  5. yelcab

    yelcab F1 World Champ
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    Is it on the left hand side or right hand side of the car?
     
  6. yelcab

    yelcab F1 World Champ
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    Last year, Superformance had two new old stock ABS pumps available for $3,000 US each. Used market like Ebay sometimes had the correct Ferrari one for a steep $1,000 each with no guaranty of operation. It was the reason the conversion kit was made available at my suggestion. The fleecing of Ferrari owner was offensive to a sensible person. Good luck with this fix. I think you are finally getting somewhere.
     
  7. Qavion

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  8. yelcab

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  9. m.stojanovic

    m.stojanovic F1 Rookie
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  10. Qavion

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  11. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    OMG.......

    OK so I hunted through my old batch of electronics testing gear and found and old DC power supply. One of those bench units that can provide between 0-30v and 0-30a of power.

    Connected up some cable to it, set it to 12.6v unlimited load (so 30A max).

    Connected the wires to the pump.

    And it ran.

    The jumper on the car side measures voltage and enough curent to light a side indicator bulb.

    I tried reseating half a dozen times, no joy..... I might just be dealing with a bad connector here fellas.

    @m.stojanovic are you sure if it lights a bulb it's supplying enough feed? The relays are definately triggering, when I pull the ABS pump power relay out I can hear it click and the 12v to the pump dies.....

    Surely not just a connector.

    Pump pressure is definitely coming up because I'm getting a softer pedal as it primes.
     
  12. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    Yes, same location but a totally different setup.
     
  13. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
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    I'm going to put some more load on it. I used an indicator bulb, I'll try a headlight bulb. The indicator bulb is only 0.4a (5w) whereas the headlight bulb is 65w (5 amps).
     
  14. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    Oh boy, oh boy....

    OK here we go fellas...

    12v from the car. It won't run the pump, but it lights a side indicator bulb (5w). So I assumed power from the car was OK.

    Connected this to the pump. no go.

    Put 12vDC manually into the pump. It ran.

    So a bad connector I'm thinking... Cleaned the connector. Was that it?

    No.

    Put a 65w high beam headlight into the same output from the car. Nothing. @m.stojanovic was spot on. It was ECU power I was seeing, not 30a from the relay.

    All relays click when inserted as they should....

    So here we go.... Ready?

    Pulled the one relay I couldn't get out before (the green one below). Reseated it. Turn on ACC, pump ran and all error warning lights went OUT.

    This is what the mechanic did last week, thinking that the clean fixed it - when in fact it was a reseat that fixed it. Why would a re-seat fix a relay?... Wiggling it didn't help, it had to be pulled and re-seated.

    Who knows, but tell me this guys - do these relays look OEM to you? Has somebody put the wrong ones in sometime during its history?

    I'm gonna kill this car. But we're getting _really_ close now!

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  15. Qavion

    Qavion F1 World Champ
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    They look too shiny to be original :p .. although the black one with the white sticker on it looks original. The green Siemens relay is probably an aftermarket one. I wonder if it can't handle the current. What's the part number on it? Can you unclip the relay base and look underneath for dodgy wiring?

    By the way, if you pulled the pump relay and the 12 volts disappeared, that would seem to prove that the ECU is not supplying any voltage.
     
  16. yelcab

    yelcab F1 World Champ
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    The sockets where the relay plug in are not very robust. The receptacles are simple spade connectors pushed into the housing and clipped in place. They work themselves loose. It would be good if you inspect the underside of the socket to see the state of the receptacles.
     
  17. m.stojanovic

    m.stojanovic F1 Rookie
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    You mean you did not have to replace any diodes? The relay pins and sockets get corroded/oxidised and develop resistance (thus small bulb lit but not the big one). Pulling relays (or fuses) out and pushing back in again rubs-off some of the oxide layer and the contact improves. It is good to pull out and push in again (better if repeated a few times) all relays and fuses, say, once a year and brush-off any obvious oxidisation on the pins. I suggest you pull all the ABS relays out and clean their pins. I normally use a small rotary brush on a Dremel to clean pins. Do not use sand paper as it will rub-off the tin coating of the pins.

    As for the orange relay, it looks suspicious having a mounting tab. Pull it out and see whether the diagram on one side of it shows two diodes in the same orientation as shown on the diagram for the Auxiliary ABS relay.
     
  18. m.stojanovic

    m.stojanovic F1 Rookie
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    That's the famous diodes.
     
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  19. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    Black one is ATE, green is Siemens, yellow is hella. I’ll check more closely tomorrow. The sockets all look the same so who knows maybe they were put back in the wrong way?

    I might just order a new set of genuine ones to be sure and will squeeze down on all spade connectors with my crimp tool.

    I’d rather be sure and not have to pull the damn carpet liner out again! That’s getting real old...
     
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  20. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    Nope. Once I reseated that relay, the pump came on and both the ABS and brake warning lights went out. Pedal went softer as it should, 6 pumps and the pump came back on - so accumulator also ok.
     
  21. Qavion

    Qavion F1 World Champ
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    #71 Qavion, May 6, 2020
    Last edited: May 6, 2020
    You can use wire colours to check this, but your yellow relay is probably in the correct slot as it matches the 3 amp purple fuse. It's not likely your fuses are mixed up as I don't think a 3 amp fuse would last long in a 30 amp slot.

    Black pump relay (30 amp green fuse): Red, white-red, grey-red (x2), red-black
    Green main relay (30 amp green fuse): Red, pink, blue-red, black, brown
    Yellow/Orange relay (3 amp purple fuse): Yellow-red, white, brown, white-red
    Diode box (no fuse): Brown, red-black, red, yellow.
     
  22. m.stojanovic

    m.stojanovic F1 Rookie
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    I can see that the yellow relay being currently sold by Ferrari parts suppliers now comes with the (unnecessary) mounting tab so that's ok. The other two relays also look original and they are all in correct sockets (see pic in my post #22).

    I don't think you need to replace the relays as the problem is obviously in their pins/sockets, not in the relays themselves. New relays will also give you trouble if the socket pins are corroded or loosened. Relays going bad is extremely rare. After checking probably a few hundred relays on my cars over the years (including relays that were more than 30 years old), I only found one bad relay and it was on a used fuse box that I bought. The relay was burnt inside probably due to a serious overload or short on an unfused line.
     
  23. Qavion

    Qavion F1 World Champ
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    I read galactica's comments slightly differently. I though he was worried about the relay sockets being in the wrong place (rather than the relays being in the wrong relative positions)
     
  24. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
    45
    I concur it's highly likely however with all of this, if there's one thing I've learned and that's never to say the word obvious :)

    The blown diode I think accounts for the years of issues with the ABS light that the previous owner had. The pump failure, brake light and ABS light is something completely unrelated and co-incidental I think.

    I'll take a look at all the spade connectors and may actually go to the effort of replacing them. I'll also follow the power supply chain for that pump further up and ensure all the upstream connectors are also cleaned. The fact that particular circuit is relatively simple should hopefully make it easier to pinpoint.
     
  25. galactica1971

    galactica1971 Rookie

    May 3, 2020
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    #75 galactica1971, May 8, 2020
    Last edited: May 8, 2020
    OK guys I have a resolution.

    First a super shout-out to @m.stojanovic for all his help. After a heap of diagnosis we've finally figured it out.

    For future generations and googler's out there, here is what fixed it... But first, a bit of a diagnostic path to help explain what was going on.

    So the black pump relay was clicking when being inserted into its holder, but the pump was not activating. I removed the pump power lead and tested voltage, 12.6v. This has me stumped until we then figured out it was delivering 12v, but not enough current. How did we know this? It could light a 5w bulb but not a 65w bulb. Genius test huh!

    So after a bit of mucking around with the other relays to determine they were OK, attention then turned back to the black pump relay.

    I took the relay out to bench test it. Connected 12v to the switch circuit, and it activated just fine (click click click) when supplied 12v.

    Next logical step was to test resistance on the load circuit in the relay. When the relay was open, it measured infinite resistance. When closed, 0 resistance (Ok well 0.001). So logic would dictate the relay is fine, right?..... OK well this is where the story gets interesting.

    Before I started pulling the wiring loom apart to clean up the spade connectors on the underside of the relay's socket, I thought I'd just humour myself and do a couple more tests.

    First I removed the power connector to the pump and verified there was still 12v to the pump. Yep, still has power. Enough to run a 5w bulb, but as before, not enough to run a 65w bulb.

    Interesting.

    The next obvious step is to pull apart the spade connectors on the socket right? Ugh what a ball ache... Before I did that I thought to myself screw it, I'm just going to jumper the socket manually. Bridge the load circuit like the relay would.

    So I put a test wire across the load circuit on the relay's socket, and BAM the pump came up... A fluke in the connector perhaps? No. Each and ever time I tried in a multitude of different points on the connector's spade connection - it came up. No lose connection there.

    So this is where my brain go into a while(1) loop (you programmers will know what I mean)…. Que? This makes no sense.

    On one hand there's a relay that opens/closes on command and measures no resistance on the load circuit once closed - YET it doesn't work when inserted and everything runs 100% when you use a simple jumper wire on the socket.

    At this point I'm working on a theory that the relay can test zero resistance on the multimeter BECAUSE there's next to no load going through it. Once significant load is introduced (ie pump load), I'm theorising, resistance goes up.

    Co-incidentally, after all my testing I've noticed this relay is getting DAMNED hot.

    So although I'm convinced it's the relay I'd love to be able to conclusively prove it... That's just how my mind works I'm afraid.

    I break open the relay and look inside. Like most relays it's fairly simple. I locate the switch (circled below) and gently file it with a small automotive file.


    Back in car. Turn on the key and BAM it works straight way. Pump the brakes, it comes back on again after about 6 pumps.... Keep trying, all good.. Key out, pump all the pressure out - key back on and on she comes.... All dash lights out, all good :) :)

    The internal contacts of the relay that bridge the load were obviously oxidised or whatever. The light filing fixed it up. Issue is 100% fixed. The relay is now only slightly warm as opposed to hot.

    Just in case anybody wants to know, @m.stojanovic is the man.
     
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