Well, first oil change done this weekend - thanks to Sloth for coming up and giving a hand... also did the diff oils, and greased the prop shaft UJ's..
Fitted in an oil change on Sloth's P38 aswell, so a good day of routine maintenance..
So with the good bit done, I'm now back to having LPG issues... this time with the ECU! I had the same symptom that OB had, dash switch didn't light up on one random occasion, and put it down to a gremlin (well, that's what I told myself whilst still quietly waiting for it to happen again, as I don't believe things like that are just random occasions!) and sure enough it did it again when I was out last week. The strange thing being that it then also wouldn't start on petrol?!?
Fortunately I managed to get it to do it again when I was at home, so I grabbed the multimeter and went probing - thinking that maybe I had disturbed a wire when I was doing the re-install, and that the fact it wouldn't start on petrol aswell would point towards the ignition switched wire, thus not giving power to the petrol injectors...
Hooked nanocom up, and figured that if it was that wire, then I wouldn't be able to communicate with engine ECU, as it's switched feed is spliced off that wire aswell, but connected to engine ECU, no trouble.
Checked battery +ve and switched +ve at LPG ECU, and both present and accounted for. Checked 5V out from ECU, and nothing. Gotcha....
Took ECU into garage and pulled it apart - massive heat patch on the board emanating from the 5V regulator, and the bigger electrolytic caps were bulging... figured that was my problem, so swapped the caps for a couple which I had that were close in value (and ordered correct values to replace with when they arrived) and put a new 5V reg in.. checked 5V output on the bench and it was there, but now pulsing from 5V-0V... metered the 12V feed into the reg, and it was dropping out aswell - was going from about 11.8V to 1V and then coming back up again. Strange... It was getting late and had to go up to the workshop the next day (saturday for oil change and servicing) so figured sod it - and wired the 12V to the new reg direct from one of the live 12V inputs (which is what it normally is - through a couple of resistors, diode, transistor etc) and had a solid 5V there afterwards - switch lit up in the vehicle when powered up, happy days.
Up at the workshop - went to start, and nothing on dash switch again, and wouldn't fire on petrol. Pulled 12V live fuse to LPG ECU and it started on petrol... and that's how it is now...
So I'm pretty sure that this ECU is pretty well poked - I will try and repair it/replace the caps and get to the bottom of the issue - but I am also looking at just buying a new ECU, as this one is ~8/9yrs old. My question is... do I buy a King one, and then just plug it in, config it, swap my LPG nozzles over for the bigger ones and calibrate it? Or do I use this as an opportunity to swap to a different brand ECU which is better at running the low impedance Hana injectors (though the King one has Hana parameters - I know from what Simon mentions about them not being the best for the ECU), or go with the AEB system, which will just plug straight in with no other modifications needed?
Also, is it worth me doing a 'mod' on a new King ECU (if I go that route) to maybe removing the factory fitted 5V regulator, and fitting an external one, wired to the board, but bolted to the metal ECU case, as it obviously runs pretty hot, given how brown a large portion of the ECU PCB is on my old one...
Also, is it likely that the lowere impedance injectors are what has 'finished off' the old ECU? even though the issue is on the feed somewhere to the 5V regulator, and the MOSFETs (I presume that's what they are that drive the LPG injectors) look fine, no brown/heat related marks around any of them... and I would imagine they have a 12V feed to them anyway..
Thoughts?
'06 4.2 Supercharged Black/Cream "Jess" -- Bought April 2021 (NZ)
'01 4.6 Vogue Black/Lightstone "Snog" -- Bought Jan 2012
'99 4.6 HSE Cobar Blue/Lightstone -- Sold March 2009
'95 4.6 HSE Epsom Green/Tan -- Traded June 2008