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You guys are so brave :cool:

Hats off to you for giving it a go! ;)
 
good luck. when i was doing this the first 8 locations took under 15 min. the last two took around an hour (50 mins of not accomplishing anything and 10 mins of soldering in the new pins after i switched soldering irons) after which i was quite irritated :)
 
Alright guys I took it apart again and gave it another go, within 5 minutes I had those 2 remaining pins in. I do not understand what was going on last night. I did take a small paper clip and ream the hole out as I melted the solder, so cash- a big thanks.

I took it a step futher and added a little bit of solder to each pin, they are now all rock solid and it looks great. Tested with the meter to ensure that all was still well.

Thanks for the support guys.
 
No... the dos mode BDM program (bd32.exe) accesses hardware directly. It doesn't understand USB to parellel converters.

You do need a real parallel port to get it to work. An - expensive - alternative could be the pemicro USB BDM device which can be had for ~250 US$ for the device and ~250US$ for the software that you need with it. Of course it's cheaper to buy an old computer that runs win98 or so with a parallel port on it. I think you should be able to get one of those for a few bucks off ebay or so.

Good luck,
Guido
 
Discussion starter · #69 ·
if you have a desktop without a parallel port on the MOBO, you can buy one (as i had to do) that fits into PCI slot for ~18 dollars... still cheaper than the PE micro usb bdm :) THIS is the one i bought, works well and comes with the NEEDED DOS drivers
 
With respect to the soldering, one thing that really helps is flux, which is a chemical that essentially cleans the surfaces of oxidants when heated, allowing the solder to attached to the other metals. Pick up a $6 plastic jar of it at Radio Shack and 10 minutes later voila, perfect connections. Neatness doesn't count with flux, just coat everything. If you haven't used decent flux before when soldering you'll be amazed at the difference.
 
It's a slightly increased risk but with a fine-tipped soldering iron, which allows you to control where you put the heat, I didn't have any issues with bridging. And, if you get a bridge, it's easy to remove with a swipe of the soldering iron.
 
Has anyone had good results with this yet? I've got a 2002 9-5 Aero and I just tried flashing a spare ecu to use the petrol R4 map and the throttle body immediately dropped into limp home mode with cold start issues and surging. I reset the throttle body and cleared the error codes and it happened again. After refitting the original ecu and clearing the error codes all was fine.

Not sure what's going on whether I managed to screw up somewhere or what.
 
Discussion starter · #75 ·
Has anyone had good results with this yet? I've got a 2002 9-5 Aero and I just tried flashing a spare ecu to use the petrol R4 map and the throttle body immediately dropped into limp home mode with cold start issues and surging. I reset the throttle body and cleared the error codes and it happened again. After refitting the original ecu and clearing the error codes all was fine.

Not sure what's going on whether I managed to screw up somewhere or what.
i have had success multiple times as well as MANY other people... what is this petrol r4 map you speak of, could you link to it so those that have had success can possibly figure out what happened?
 
I finally found a tuner who was able to extract the fNordic stg3 for my 2005 Aero Automatic file. If anyone has the same program, I would like to send it for a comparison as I have a feeling since day 1 that they have sent me either a wrong program or the same program for a country which is cooler then Turkey and fuel ratings are not same (best is 97RON). I anyone PMs me his email, I will send the file for comparison. Experts would be able to comment just looking at the map anyway considering it works with 3.5 fpr.
 
i have had success multiple times as well as MANY other people... what is this petrol r4 map you speak of, could you link to it so those that have had success can possibly figure out what happened?
Thanks for the suggestion Ski. More to the point thanks for bringing this to everyone's attention.

I managed to fix it in the end. It seemed to be a bad flash that caused the car to go wibble and lock the throttlebody into limp mode. Didn't figure this bit out until I went for a quick drive with the original ECU where I could play a bit and the CEL came on when I booted it, obviously down on boost power etc.

The R4 map I was refering to was Mackan's one here: http://forum.ecuproject.com/viewtopic.php?f=63&t=958
B235R rev4_270hk_400nm_open_petrol_EI02Y02C.56X.bin

After I dropped the baud rate of the parallel port and erased the ecu again evrything seemed to go sweet. Just need to learn what exactly the values are now to customise it slightly. Until that time comes it's going to be fun. :cheesy:
 
Discussion starter · #79 ·
cool, glad you had success - it is fun trying different things. I have to say I am extremely glad I bought an extra ECU as it makes the playing easier.

I am currently running mackan's biopower file and actually brought myself to fill up with e85 the other day. Next fill up will be regular petrol as I am headed to DC and will be taking my extra ECU just incase something happens (it has before) and don't have biopower burned onto that one.
 
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