David Gentleman wrote:We know the plug in loom works because it did on Peters car, you found wiring faults in original car loom, which made the car not even run on the original ecu, so nothing to do with the plug in adaptor or Adaptronic, but you in your infinite wisdom and arrogance pulled apart the loom, adamant it was wrong, bodged it back together and charged Tony £1500 for the bother...and then didnt even bother to heatshrink any terminals, and promptly the solder joints fell off. Then the trigger wheel incident came down to the fact you left with wiring for it sitting on the exhaust and melted...
CHECK YOUR FACTS. You are wrong on just about every point.
1: The car would not *start* on the original ECU because the starter was shagged, and it cranked very slowwwwwly. I still have that starter if you'd like it.
2: The cost of the work was a lot less than £1500, was not just ECU work (eg battery, starter), and I only charged a fraction of the time it actually took AND subsequently re-wired it at no extra charge.
3: If you think that heatshrink made any of your original wiring "safe" (or that it has anything to do with keeping solder joins from falling off?!) you're mad. My brief, as I have stated before, was simply to "get it working" and I did not consider the job finished until the entire loom was re-wired.
4: Faults with the loom that you (or your mechanic) fitted included but weren't limited to
- When plugged in and ignition switched on, ECU did not power up, power supply on wrong pin.
- Ground supply to ECU connected to each other, but nothing else, least of all the car's ground, and as the ECU uses low side swtiches on most of its outputs, this is pretty critical
- One bank of injectors had no power supply because the wires had been soldered to the wrong pin (injectors are fired by switching the ground pin, the high side is constant with ignition)
- ignition output wire had been stripped and twisted together, and was about 2" shorter than all the other wires.
Even with all the above corrected, the thing still wouldn't start thanks to a very silly bit of config which I completely hold my hands up to taking ages to find - and which Andy himself didn't spot either.
The crank trigger - how on earth can you criticise me for something I didn't even fit - that you (or your bloke) did? Initially it worked even though it looked like a poorly fitted hubcap at 90mph, but the accelleration of the car caused the wiring to swing back against the exhaust. Eventually the wobble got progressively worse and the signal started dropping out.
Martin, Tony has two ecus of mine which are faulty from your hands, in a box in his garage,
WHAT?! One failed while I was using it, correct. From the word go, I reported TO YOU that the MAP signal was playing funny buggers. You told me to go ahead and use one of the second gen ECUs I had and you'd replace it. Which I did after the original ECU stopped accepting interrogation altogether.
THE OTHER WAS ALREADY IN A BOX IN THE CAR THAT YOU YOURSELF (OR YOUR BLOKE) BLEW UP BY DRIVING THE IGNITION OUTPUT DIRECTLY TO THE COIL - AND YOU YOURSELF TOLD ME THIS! I never touched it or even tried to use it...
and the one on his car currently, you also said was faulty as you said the lambda circuit wasnt working, which turned out to be you crimping the earth and live together.
Okay, I'll hold my hands up to this mistake. I admit I made what was a non-critical wiring mistake. And it was the lambda sensor's ouput connected to its shield, if you want to get technical.
I -suggested- early on that it might be the ECU but having got a PRV running an adaptronic with the same Lambda sensor, a quick swap over left me knowing that it must be wiring, and told Tony this.
I seem to recall that a small mistake was made on (what is now) your engine and that resulted in catastrophic failure. So how can you criticise my mistake, esp when you haven't personally done one yourself?
My car idles perfectly on Adaptronic so whats the deal?
Okay, just on that score, I challenge you to set Tony's idle up reliably, if it's okay with him
For the record, the Adaptronic is still a great piece of kit which I like using and would like to continue using.