21-12-2014, 06:10 PM
Hi All,
X reg 1.4 petrol.Â
I had a problem with the starter motor not engaging so I made sure everything was off, closed all the doors, waited 10 mins, unhooked the battery, took the filter box off, undid the bolts on the starter motor, undid the nuts holding the wires on, cleaned & lubed the sliding cog & shaft, put everything back, connected the battery, waited 10 mins, turned on the headlights, waited a few seconds, and tried to start the car. The starter motor worked fine (
 ). It caught & fired up for about half a second then died & has refused to even think about starting (it turns over fine) ever since.
I have tried all of the 'correct' methods for bringing the BSI/Immobiliser back up that I have found (various wait times, various lights, etc.).
One thing that's bugging me though is that every method says that all doors must be shut when you do this.
Now, my Berlingo always (with very rare & short-lived exceptions) thinks that there's a door open & I'm wondering whether this is screwing up the reboot process.
On the drivers door pillar there is a courtesy light switch. I undid the screw, pulled it out, and found that there were no wires clipped to it. They must have been pulled off somehow, I thought. I removed the trim in the footwell, and the rubber gromit around the wires going to the door, and still couldn't find the switch wires.
A quick Google says that the front door courtesy switch is part of the lock. There are indeed two wires going to the lock.
(Why put a door switch in a car when it isn't used/wired up????)
I put a meter across them & sure enough closing/opening the door opens/closes the circuit.Â
So the driver's door's ok. Tested passenger door, also OK.
The sliding doors ALSO have courtesy light switches in the pillar. Now then, as there're no wires going into the door I'm assuming that these actually work, but I don't know as I can't get them out.
They're covered by a circular rubber gromit that pulls off to reveal a circular plastic switch with three semicircular notches around the edge.
I've tried carefully levering it out. I've tried rotating it as far as it will go in either direction & levering it out. I've tried rotating it to the point where it feels loosest & levering it out...
The bugger won't budge.
Now then, the questions:Â
1: Given that that the front pillar switch is there when it isn't used, and given that there are no wires going to the sliding door, what's the chance that the courtesy switch for the sliding door is the one that I'm trying to get out?
2: How do I get it out so that I can see whether there are any wires attached to it?
Any and all help gratefully accepted.
Many thanks.
X reg 1.4 petrol.Â
I had a problem with the starter motor not engaging so I made sure everything was off, closed all the doors, waited 10 mins, unhooked the battery, took the filter box off, undid the bolts on the starter motor, undid the nuts holding the wires on, cleaned & lubed the sliding cog & shaft, put everything back, connected the battery, waited 10 mins, turned on the headlights, waited a few seconds, and tried to start the car. The starter motor worked fine (

I have tried all of the 'correct' methods for bringing the BSI/Immobiliser back up that I have found (various wait times, various lights, etc.).
One thing that's bugging me though is that every method says that all doors must be shut when you do this.
Now, my Berlingo always (with very rare & short-lived exceptions) thinks that there's a door open & I'm wondering whether this is screwing up the reboot process.
On the drivers door pillar there is a courtesy light switch. I undid the screw, pulled it out, and found that there were no wires clipped to it. They must have been pulled off somehow, I thought. I removed the trim in the footwell, and the rubber gromit around the wires going to the door, and still couldn't find the switch wires.
A quick Google says that the front door courtesy switch is part of the lock. There are indeed two wires going to the lock.
(Why put a door switch in a car when it isn't used/wired up????)
I put a meter across them & sure enough closing/opening the door opens/closes the circuit.Â
So the driver's door's ok. Tested passenger door, also OK.
The sliding doors ALSO have courtesy light switches in the pillar. Now then, as there're no wires going into the door I'm assuming that these actually work, but I don't know as I can't get them out.
They're covered by a circular rubber gromit that pulls off to reveal a circular plastic switch with three semicircular notches around the edge.
I've tried carefully levering it out. I've tried rotating it as far as it will go in either direction & levering it out. I've tried rotating it to the point where it feels loosest & levering it out...
The bugger won't budge.
Now then, the questions:Â
1: Given that that the front pillar switch is there when it isn't used, and given that there are no wires going to the sliding door, what's the chance that the courtesy switch for the sliding door is the one that I'm trying to get out?
2: How do I get it out so that I can see whether there are any wires attached to it?
Any and all help gratefully accepted.
Many thanks.