A final check over and a BSI reset then a ten mile burn up at 60/70mph and it's as sweet as a nut, all the fault code have disappeared and the EML is off.
Silly thought.
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Gibbo2286
- (Donor 2020)
- Posts: 8170
- Joined: 08 Jun 2011, 18:04
- x 2943
Re: Silly thought.
All back in business now.
A final check over and a BSI reset then a ten mile burn up at 60/70mph and it's as sweet as a nut, all the fault code have disappeared and the EML is off.
A final check over and a BSI reset then a ten mile burn up at 60/70mph and it's as sweet as a nut, all the fault code have disappeared and the EML is off.
Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new. (Albert Einstein)
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admiral51
- (Donor 2023)
- Posts: 2669
- Joined: 24 May 2007, 10:11
- x 392
Re: Silly thought.
Don't know what all the fuss was about, we all knew you would get it sorted

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NewcastleFalcon
- Posts: 26399
- Joined: 25 Feb 2009, 10:40
- x 7162
Re: Silly thought.
Which bit fixed it Gibbo
The replacement HP Pump
The replacement Pressure sensor
or
REgards Neil
The replacement HP Pump
The replacement Pressure sensor
or
or all threeGibbo2286 wrote: 07 Sep 2019, 12:17 put the diag stuff aside, bled the system out right up to the injectors .
REgards Neil
Only One AA Box left
687 Trinity, Jersey
687 Trinity, Jersey
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Gibbo2286
- (Donor 2020)
- Posts: 8170
- Joined: 08 Jun 2011, 18:04
- x 2943
Re: Silly thought.
I can't be sure Neil, it might have been any one of the many electronic bits on the pump or the fuel rail or the glow plug system or even just a bloody minded ECU. 
Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new. (Albert Einstein)
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Rhothgar
- (Donor 2026)
- Posts: 2432
- Joined: 22 Nov 2004, 00:21
- x 225
Re: Silly thought.
Oh what a sickly sweet conclusion! I was hoping for a definitive answer to my Xantia HDi non-start.
I think I have to next go down the pump exchange route.
Did you ever check any of the wiring out Gibbo2286? I ask because I've crawled all over the wiring in mine and the insulation looks very aged and almost pitted. Perhaps this is the price of living in a diesel environment. Wires feel stiff to a few choice components but resistances check out fine so probably not corroded.
I think I have to next go down the pump exchange route.
Did you ever check any of the wiring out Gibbo2286? I ask because I've crawled all over the wiring in mine and the insulation looks very aged and almost pitted. Perhaps this is the price of living in a diesel environment. Wires feel stiff to a few choice components but resistances check out fine so probably not corroded.
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Gibbo2286
- (Donor 2020)
- Posts: 8170
- Joined: 08 Jun 2011, 18:04
- x 2943
Re: Silly thought.
I think maybe you should do as I did, forget the diagnostics and try to get the thing bled right up to the injectors,Rhothgar wrote: 22 Aug 2020, 10:24 Oh what a sickly sweet conclusion! I was hoping for a definitive answer to my Xantia HDi non-start.
I think I have to next go down the pump exchange route.
Did you ever check any of the wiring out Gibbo2286? I ask because I've crawled all over the wiring in mine and the insulation looks very aged and almost pitted. Perhaps this is the price of living in a diesel environment. Wires feel stiff to a few choice components but resistances check out fine so probably not corroded.
I think that mine was trapped air in the system between the hp pump and the injectors so not letting the pressure rise enough to fire them.
I bled mine by disconnecting the injector pipes one at a time and using a hand pump to suck up the fuel until it was clear of air right up to there, then it fired up with a shot of Easy-Start and kept going, not missed a beat since.
Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new. (Albert Einstein)