Hey y'all,
I'm a long-time FJ40 owner and I've successfully chased and remedied electrical problems on my Cruisers as well as on a couple of older Harleys ('59 XLCH and '76 FXE) but I'm stymied and could use some help on my current baby, a '97 911 Carrera. It has an alarm-immobilizer-central locking system that went on the fritz and I found a blown fuse on the electronic brain of the system. I replaced that but the new fuse immediately blew. I recently had it in the dealer shop for something else and asked them to check out the locking-alarm-immobilizer and they found that the electronic brain was OK (I had thought this might have been the problem) and that there was a short in the circuit. I had already checked for frayed insulation at obvious locations such as where the wiring goes from the body into the doors but hadn't found anything. Any suggestions as to how to track down a short, save examining every inch of every wire in the car? What I'd like to be able to do is to at least narrow down the possibilities rather than to have to chase every wire. In the meantime, I manually lock the car and so I'm able to drive her which never fails to bring a smile to my face.
No, I don't waste my time with the Porsche boards when it comes to technical issues. About anyone there who owns a late model wouldn't want to get their hands dirty with mundane problems like wiring shorts.
Thanks,
Pete
I'm a long-time FJ40 owner and I've successfully chased and remedied electrical problems on my Cruisers as well as on a couple of older Harleys ('59 XLCH and '76 FXE) but I'm stymied and could use some help on my current baby, a '97 911 Carrera. It has an alarm-immobilizer-central locking system that went on the fritz and I found a blown fuse on the electronic brain of the system. I replaced that but the new fuse immediately blew. I recently had it in the dealer shop for something else and asked them to check out the locking-alarm-immobilizer and they found that the electronic brain was OK (I had thought this might have been the problem) and that there was a short in the circuit. I had already checked for frayed insulation at obvious locations such as where the wiring goes from the body into the doors but hadn't found anything. Any suggestions as to how to track down a short, save examining every inch of every wire in the car? What I'd like to be able to do is to at least narrow down the possibilities rather than to have to chase every wire. In the meantime, I manually lock the car and so I'm able to drive her which never fails to bring a smile to my face.
No, I don't waste my time with the Porsche boards when it comes to technical issues. About anyone there who owns a late model wouldn't want to get their hands dirty with mundane problems like wiring shorts.
Thanks,
Pete