Moderator: Luke



Altransit wrote:That melted wire IS the fusible link to the glow plugs, and is designed to burn out in the event of one or more of the plugs going short circuit.
Since the plugs can be an absolute ******* to remove without snapping off in the head, many people, myself included, just left the faulty plugs in place, cut out the burnt link wire, and carried on as normal. With one or two exceptions, the Mk6 engines don't really need the glow plugs to start, even on cold mornings, and they definitely won't interfere with the workings of the engine management electronics
metalworker0 wrote:just had a look on ebay ..and i think you have to buy the whole glow plug loom .
burning out usually the result of glow plug malfunction, going to ground ..so taking lots of power - so test and replace glow plugs before replacing loom


metalworker0 wrote:Not sure on how glow plug faults would bugger the ecu . ass glow plugs buggering is common occurrence , and you'd think it would be protected.
metalworker0 wrote:finding bad glow plug ..not with volts but ohms - resistance
there should be a value for good and a value for bad ..
glow plug is i believe tiny heating element
it has resistance ..it can fail when the little heating element burns through ..then there will be no circuit
..or it some how goes to ground .. that's when it takes out the looms fusable link
metalworker0 wrote:you are correct , i was looking yesterday and its 80 amps



MinorMatt wrote:The codes you show don't suggest an ECU failure - more the pump has gone faulty?

marmuchon wrote:It's look that it can be an issue with the "Fuel pump driver". the so called VP30/VP44 driver (by the way how to know if i've vp30 or vp44 ?)
So now, i guess i have to find some one who can repair or swap this pump driver.Thanks for your help

knobby1 wrote:The EDC on the fuel pump is the usual culprit, they often blow a Mosfet on the little circuit board. There's people on fleabay who can sort it for you.
Sometimes it can be a wiring issue too, on the FWD's where the loom goes over the starter, the wiring can break inside the trunking.

marmuchon wrote:My last concern: I just saw on the forum that mk6 and mk7 do not like bump start as it can cause the timing chain to jump some teeth.
Since i've made some bump start to get back my power while driving, can it be the cause of all those issues ?
What are the symptoms of a timing chain slightly out of timing ?
I made at least 400 miles after my last bump start, and did not notice anything special with engine sound
Thanks a lot for your help !


To successfully differentiate between metering solanoid failure and pump ecu failure there is a simple test you can perform. Cut the two wires from the pump ecu to the metering solanoid. put a multimeter on the two wires from the pump and get somebody to turn on the ignition. You should see 12volts or there abouts, and then dropping to about 6 volts when the engine is turned over.
If no power is registered the ECU has failed. If you do get power then the metering solenoid has failed.


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