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BMW 3-Series (E90 E92) Forum
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DSC Motor Swap fail, am I missing something??
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04-13-2019, 01:09 PM | #1 |
Captain
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DSC Motor Swap fail, am I missing something??
I have had the trifecta lights ABS, DSC, & BRAKE. From what I have learned recently it is likely bad DSC motor (probably stuck brushes).
So I swapped out the DSC motor with one from my 75k mile parts car (also an E93 like mine), that didnt have DSC errors when it was together. I kept the original module from my car to avoid having to code a "new" one and put it on the other motor. I then manually bled the 4 wheels until new fluid came out with a one man vacuum bleeder tool. The brakes felt fine again when I test drove it. I have ISTA D now so I have tried to recalibrate the DSC but it still fails with codes 005DD0, 005DF0 & 005DF1. When I clear codes the ABS light goes off and I am down to just the 005DD0 code (Hydraulic unit: Adjustment, DSC unit valves). As soon as I start the car I get all 3 codes again. Now that I got INST-D finally installed I tried to run the bleeding proceedure and it instantly errors. It seems that my DSC motor is not able to run. I did the voltage test in ISTA and it passed, the module is yellow and can be communicated with. Is it likely that the actual control unit is bad instead of just the common DC motor only problem? I guess I can remove the DSC unit again and try to bench test the DC motor which I wish I had done the other day. But before I have to 4 wheel bleed my whole car again I got to ask, am I doing something wrong? |
04-14-2019, 01:19 AM | #2 | |
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04-15-2019, 01:48 PM | #3 |
Colonel
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It's amazing how the world is finally figuring out the brush connections are failure points. Glad to see the tool industry moving over and hopefully the current crop of parts has made or is moving towards that correction as well.
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04-15-2019, 01:57 PM | #4 |
Captain
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UPDATE: I was able to successfully get the brushes loosened up to repair the motor then to reattach the motor I had to drill and tap 4 shallow holes in the thicker part of the aluminum. I had to be careful not to go into where the fluids and valves were. Then I secured the motor with little scrap pieces of aluminum that I bent so they had a little bit of tension against the motor tabs to hold it in place. After that I put some hot glue on the screws so they won't vibrate loose. even though I'm manually bled the brakes and the DSC valve the only way I could get it to successfully go through the test is to do the factory automated bleeding procedure which was actually pretty easy. I am now code free with completely new brake fluid throughout the system.
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