new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
#31
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
> you just been spooffffeeedddd.
>
> now you gotta start all over again.
>
> dj
What sad lives some people lead!
Ah well, I'd not done that much mileage anyway. It's going in for a
service in the next few days anyway, so I'll ask them about sorting
it for me.
Matt.
#32
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
"Matthew Maddock" <matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote in
message news:dc3f7i$7kh$1@nwrdmz03.dmz.ncs.ea.ibs-infra.bt.com...
>
>> you just been spooffffeeedddd.
>>
>> now you gotta start all over again.
>>
>> dj
>
>
> What sad lives some people lead!
>
> Ah well, I'd not done that much mileage anyway. It's going in for a
> service in the next few days anyway, so I'll ask them about sorting
> it for me.
>
> Matt.
not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
dj
#33
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
"Matthew Maddock" <matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote in
message news:dc3f7i$7kh$1@nwrdmz03.dmz.ncs.ea.ibs-infra.bt.com...
>
>> you just been spooffffeeedddd.
>>
>> now you gotta start all over again.
>>
>> dj
>
>
> What sad lives some people lead!
>
> Ah well, I'd not done that much mileage anyway. It's going in for a
> service in the next few days anyway, so I'll ask them about sorting
> it for me.
>
> Matt.
not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
dj
#34
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
"Matthew Maddock" <matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote in
message news:dc3f7i$7kh$1@nwrdmz03.dmz.ncs.ea.ibs-infra.bt.com...
>
>> you just been spooffffeeedddd.
>>
>> now you gotta start all over again.
>>
>> dj
>
>
> What sad lives some people lead!
>
> Ah well, I'd not done that much mileage anyway. It's going in for a
> service in the next few days anyway, so I'll ask them about sorting
> it for me.
>
> Matt.
not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
dj
#35
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>
> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>
> dj
>
I'm in the UK also.
Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
the independents.
I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
it settles.
cheers,
Matt.
> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>
> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>
> dj
>
I'm in the UK also.
Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
the independents.
I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
it settles.
cheers,
Matt.
#36
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>
> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>
> dj
>
I'm in the UK also.
Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
the independents.
I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
it settles.
cheers,
Matt.
> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>
> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>
> dj
>
I'm in the UK also.
Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
the independents.
I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
it settles.
cheers,
Matt.
#37
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>
> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>
> dj
>
I'm in the UK also.
Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
the independents.
I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
it settles.
cheers,
Matt.
> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>
> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>
> dj
>
I'm in the UK also.
Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
the independents.
I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
it settles.
cheers,
Matt.
#38
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005 21:29:04 +0000 (UTC), Matthew Maddock
<matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote:
>> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
>> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
>> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
>> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
>> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>>
>> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
>> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>>
>> dj
>>
>
>I'm in the UK also.
>
>Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
>experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
>the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
>than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
>the independents.
>
>I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
>impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
>
>Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
>it settles.
>
>cheers,
>
>Matt.
I might have missed it, but did you say the Engine Check light (aka MIL) is
lit?
There's all kinds of folklore and outright voodoo about how to clear a MIL
indicator after a battery or ECU replacement, but normally, a 15 to 20 minute
driving loop including highway speeds, city speeds, full stops, idling time,
and one full engine run-stop-run cycle, will clear the MIL functions.
What may have happened is some part (eg: the MAF) is so far out of adaptation
range that the ECU cannot clear all of the bits to get the MIL to turn off.
There's a certain amount of variation that the adaptation process will allow,
and any part that's aged outside that range will fault the system until
replaced. You can step on the ECU and the MIL bits all you want with a
VAG-COM, for instance, but within a couple of days for sure that MIL will come
right back on.
On the up side, this is covered so thoroughly in the diagnostic bits that it
should be trivial for an Audi main line shop to diagnosis and fix, promptly...
/daytripper
'00 s4 6spd, a Bentley CD, and a trusty VAG-COM
<matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote:
>> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
>> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
>> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
>> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
>> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>>
>> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
>> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>>
>> dj
>>
>
>I'm in the UK also.
>
>Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
>experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
>the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
>than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
>the independents.
>
>I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
>impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
>
>Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
>it settles.
>
>cheers,
>
>Matt.
I might have missed it, but did you say the Engine Check light (aka MIL) is
lit?
There's all kinds of folklore and outright voodoo about how to clear a MIL
indicator after a battery or ECU replacement, but normally, a 15 to 20 minute
driving loop including highway speeds, city speeds, full stops, idling time,
and one full engine run-stop-run cycle, will clear the MIL functions.
What may have happened is some part (eg: the MAF) is so far out of adaptation
range that the ECU cannot clear all of the bits to get the MIL to turn off.
There's a certain amount of variation that the adaptation process will allow,
and any part that's aged outside that range will fault the system until
replaced. You can step on the ECU and the MIL bits all you want with a
VAG-COM, for instance, but within a couple of days for sure that MIL will come
right back on.
On the up side, this is covered so thoroughly in the diagnostic bits that it
should be trivial for an Audi main line shop to diagnosis and fix, promptly...
/daytripper
'00 s4 6spd, a Bentley CD, and a trusty VAG-COM
#39
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005 21:29:04 +0000 (UTC), Matthew Maddock
<matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote:
>> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
>> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
>> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
>> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
>> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>>
>> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
>> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>>
>> dj
>>
>
>I'm in the UK also.
>
>Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
>experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
>the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
>than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
>the independents.
>
>I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
>impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
>
>Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
>it settles.
>
>cheers,
>
>Matt.
I might have missed it, but did you say the Engine Check light (aka MIL) is
lit?
There's all kinds of folklore and outright voodoo about how to clear a MIL
indicator after a battery or ECU replacement, but normally, a 15 to 20 minute
driving loop including highway speeds, city speeds, full stops, idling time,
and one full engine run-stop-run cycle, will clear the MIL functions.
What may have happened is some part (eg: the MAF) is so far out of adaptation
range that the ECU cannot clear all of the bits to get the MIL to turn off.
There's a certain amount of variation that the adaptation process will allow,
and any part that's aged outside that range will fault the system until
replaced. You can step on the ECU and the MIL bits all you want with a
VAG-COM, for instance, but within a couple of days for sure that MIL will come
right back on.
On the up side, this is covered so thoroughly in the diagnostic bits that it
should be trivial for an Audi main line shop to diagnosis and fix, promptly...
/daytripper
'00 s4 6spd, a Bentley CD, and a trusty VAG-COM
<matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote:
>> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
>> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
>> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
>> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
>> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>>
>> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
>> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>>
>> dj
>>
>
>I'm in the UK also.
>
>Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
>experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
>the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
>than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
>the independents.
>
>I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
>impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
>
>Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
>it settles.
>
>cheers,
>
>Matt.
I might have missed it, but did you say the Engine Check light (aka MIL) is
lit?
There's all kinds of folklore and outright voodoo about how to clear a MIL
indicator after a battery or ECU replacement, but normally, a 15 to 20 minute
driving loop including highway speeds, city speeds, full stops, idling time,
and one full engine run-stop-run cycle, will clear the MIL functions.
What may have happened is some part (eg: the MAF) is so far out of adaptation
range that the ECU cannot clear all of the bits to get the MIL to turn off.
There's a certain amount of variation that the adaptation process will allow,
and any part that's aged outside that range will fault the system until
replaced. You can step on the ECU and the MIL bits all you want with a
VAG-COM, for instance, but within a couple of days for sure that MIL will come
right back on.
On the up side, this is covered so thoroughly in the diagnostic bits that it
should be trivial for an Audi main line shop to diagnosis and fix, promptly...
/daytripper
'00 s4 6spd, a Bentley CD, and a trusty VAG-COM
#40
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: new battery - now tick over has gone mad!
On Mon, 25 Jul 2005 21:29:04 +0000 (UTC), Matthew Maddock
<matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote:
>> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
>> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
>> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
>> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
>> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>>
>> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
>> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>>
>> dj
>>
>
>I'm in the UK also.
>
>Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
>experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
>the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
>than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
>the independents.
>
>I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
>impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
>
>Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
>it settles.
>
>cheers,
>
>Matt.
I might have missed it, but did you say the Engine Check light (aka MIL) is
lit?
There's all kinds of folklore and outright voodoo about how to clear a MIL
indicator after a battery or ECU replacement, but normally, a 15 to 20 minute
driving loop including highway speeds, city speeds, full stops, idling time,
and one full engine run-stop-run cycle, will clear the MIL functions.
What may have happened is some part (eg: the MAF) is so far out of adaptation
range that the ECU cannot clear all of the bits to get the MIL to turn off.
There's a certain amount of variation that the adaptation process will allow,
and any part that's aged outside that range will fault the system until
replaced. You can step on the ECU and the MIL bits all you want with a
VAG-COM, for instance, but within a couple of days for sure that MIL will come
right back on.
On the up side, this is covered so thoroughly in the diagnostic bits that it
should be trivial for an Audi main line shop to diagnosis and fix, promptly...
/daytripper
'00 s4 6spd, a Bentley CD, and a trusty VAG-COM
<matthew.maddock@nospamplease.mmaddock.com> wrote:
>> not sure what an ecu check costs out there but it might be worth a check.
>> Here in the UK its £30 ($50) by a third party test house. Had my sons
>> checked recently because of poor running, the check showed up a problem and
>> the repair cost £120 which included the £30 so it was better than the
>> dealership who quoted me £200 for a new ecu.
>>
>> somehow I doubt yours has a problem, just from a battery change, it just
>> needs time to settle or even a nice long run out.
>>
>> dj
>>
>
>I'm in the UK also.
>
>Going to take it into "All Audi" in Bristol (anyone had previous
>experience of them?) I'm not paying the £80+ per hour rate at
>the dealerships! Besides, in my experience, once a car is more
>than about 10 years old, the dealerships know less about them than
>the independents.
>
>I've used All Audi for parts a few years ago, and was very
>impressed, hopefully their service dept is as good.
>
>Regardless, I'll give it a good run out tomorrow and see if
>it settles.
>
>cheers,
>
>Matt.
I might have missed it, but did you say the Engine Check light (aka MIL) is
lit?
There's all kinds of folklore and outright voodoo about how to clear a MIL
indicator after a battery or ECU replacement, but normally, a 15 to 20 minute
driving loop including highway speeds, city speeds, full stops, idling time,
and one full engine run-stop-run cycle, will clear the MIL functions.
What may have happened is some part (eg: the MAF) is so far out of adaptation
range that the ECU cannot clear all of the bits to get the MIL to turn off.
There's a certain amount of variation that the adaptation process will allow,
and any part that's aged outside that range will fault the system until
replaced. You can step on the ECU and the MIL bits all you want with a
VAG-COM, for instance, but within a couple of days for sure that MIL will come
right back on.
On the up side, this is covered so thoroughly in the diagnostic bits that it
should be trivial for an Audi main line shop to diagnosis and fix, promptly...
/daytripper
'00 s4 6spd, a Bentley CD, and a trusty VAG-COM