03 Jag with DCS, engine and parkbrake defaults
#1
03 Jag with DCS, engine and parkbrake defaults
On Monday night I went to a car wash, just sprayed it down, drove it home and parked it in the garage. Tuesday morning all DCS, engine and parkbrake faults were on, tried running it for awhile do to how cold it was over night, then pulling key out and trying to reset but no luck. Wednesday I changed the spark plugs, valve cover gaskets, rear struts and disconnect the battery but with no help clearing the codes. Had it towed to a local import garage that works on Jaguars, they pulled 35 codes, p0171, p0174, p0101, p0112, p1251, p1637, p1260, p1582, p0121, p0430, p0442, pc1175, p1111. After clearing the codes, 1 came back as throttle position The on-board diagnostic checks the throttle position when the ignition is at 1 (AUX). A diagnostic trouble code is logged if the value is greater than 7 degrees which they said is at 9 degrees. I bought a used throttle body off a 03 Jaguar x-type 6 cylinder, same cylinder as mine just a x-type not s-type like mine but still no luck of getting it out of limp mode.
My question is could it be the c1175 wheel speed rear left input circuit failure? Thank you for any info you can give me.
My question is could it be the c1175 wheel speed rear left input circuit failure? Thank you for any info you can give me.
#4
I thought by charging the battery on my 10amp charger for several hours would fix that problem. The first day I placed the car in the garage and heated the garage all day, disconnected the electricial plugs, dried them up with a blow dyer. The shop said the gears in the throttle body sounded bad, I'm going to try the old throttle body on it and find a way to get a new battery since this Jaguar is our only means of trans, it's one thing to walk 2 miles for a belt or something and carry it back but a battery I don't think so lol. Thanks again, oops also when it was at the shop, wouldn't they catch that the battery was low?
#5
I agree with Mikey and John...would've started with the battery on this one. As to the shop catching it, you didn't say how well they speak Jaguar, but all you listed were Pcodes which are accessible to most anyone. If they had diagnostic equipment capable of reading Jag C codes, I'd feel more comfortable assuming they'd suggest looking into the battery issue. But let's face it, the car cranks and starts, and has a boatload of codes, so if they are not well-versed in Jaaag-speak, first, it would probably never occur to them that the battery could be the root cause, and secondly, should it.....they may fear you writing them off as idiots for suggesting it. Not sure about this, but the margin on throttle bodies may be greater than that on batteries, as well.
Edit: I read a little closer - in your list of codes you chucked a P in front of the C1175. If, in fact you have a C1175 fault, that would explain the DSC unavailable prompt. But, you said after clearing, only one code returned and though you didn't say what it actually was, I guess it wasn't the C1175 b/c it was associated with the throttle body - I'd look at wet connectors on that one - did you spray the mill down while at the car wash? Or just the vehicle exterior. I don't believe the V-6's are as famous for wet-throttle-body-connectors as the V-8's from just a car wash or rainstorm, but certainly if you sprayed it directly that could be in play.
Edit: I read a little closer - in your list of codes you chucked a P in front of the C1175. If, in fact you have a C1175 fault, that would explain the DSC unavailable prompt. But, you said after clearing, only one code returned and though you didn't say what it actually was, I guess it wasn't the C1175 b/c it was associated with the throttle body - I'd look at wet connectors on that one - did you spray the mill down while at the car wash? Or just the vehicle exterior. I don't believe the V-6's are as famous for wet-throttle-body-connectors as the V-8's from just a car wash or rainstorm, but certainly if you sprayed it directly that could be in play.
Last edited by aholbro1; 12-14-2013 at 02:13 PM.
#6
Many shops (including Jaguar dealerships) tend to miss failing battery issues. Slack dealerships have been known to replace entire transmissions in situations where all that was truly wrong was a failing battery. And yes, moisture can get into the throttle body assemblies on the V6 cars as well as the V8 cars. That's just one reason why I always wash both of our Jaguars by hand with a light stream from the garden hose. Keeping them away from the commercial car washes goes a long way towards avoiding moisture problems under the hood that tend to throw these cars into limp mode....
Last edited by Jon89; 12-14-2013 at 02:59 PM.
#7
Well I appreciate the advice, I called a local parts place by my house and they have one in stock. The guys is so nice that he is delivering the battery to my house in just a few, I hope this is the last thing I purchase and put on this car, if not it"s off to the dealer :-(. I'll let you all know how it goes.
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#8
No luck with a new battery so brings me to a new question. The used throttle body was off a x-type and mines a s-type, the last 6 vin #s were lower then mine. Would that not work on mine and should I look for the right vin number body as I did on my last throttle body? The one that is on there now cost me $200, lasted a year and half and the guy made sure the vin matched. Thanks again for all the help
#9
#11
Manycars,
There are quite a few posts on this forum where members have installed new batteries and immediately saw their issues and spurious codes disappear. You just haven't done enough reading....
A new battery was the answer in September 2012 for some of the classic weak battery signs that my wife's XK8 was exhibiting at the time, so I can attest first-hand....
There are quite a few posts on this forum where members have installed new batteries and immediately saw their issues and spurious codes disappear. You just haven't done enough reading....
A new battery was the answer in September 2012 for some of the classic weak battery signs that my wife's XK8 was exhibiting at the time, so I can attest first-hand....
#13
#14
That's two. Any more bids?
Any details on what a new battery fixed? You see, I have another car with just as much complexity as the Jag and it has a really weak battery. Yet it doesn't give me any issues? The EPB operates even when the car barely starts for example. Why is the Jag so different, battery wise?
Any details on what a new battery fixed? You see, I have another car with just as much complexity as the Jag and it has a really weak battery. Yet it doesn't give me any issues? The EPB operates even when the car barely starts for example. Why is the Jag so different, battery wise?
Last edited by manycars; 12-15-2013 at 11:28 AM.
#15
Reported new-battery fixes that I remember reading about during the nearly five years that I've been on this forum:
Transmission faults from at least three different forum members.
Window programming faults from too many forum members to count.
ABS/DSC faults from too many forum members to count.
A fuel pump issue from one forum member.
I'm sure other long-time members will speak up with other examples....
Transmission faults from at least three different forum members.
Window programming faults from too many forum members to count.
ABS/DSC faults from too many forum members to count.
A fuel pump issue from one forum member.
I'm sure other long-time members will speak up with other examples....
#16
#17
OK, as of a new battery fixing anything it did not. I feel better that we have one since the battery is over 5yrs old, I can't get any codes off of it because I don't want to tow it back to the repair shop. The shop didn't give me the exact code after clearing them but it did show that the TB was over 7 degree's at a 9 degree setting which is the reason for the limp mode. The only different between the old TB and used one I got off of the X-type is the old run's at a higher rpm then the X-type. I've done some research that Jaguar TB goes by your Vin #, my last 6 is M93733 and the X-type vin was M437?? so that makes me think thats the reason it didn't work. The repair shop I go to by my house and chat with they looked up the part number for 2003 Jag 6cyl S-type matches up with a 2003 Jag X-type 6cyl. I don't know at this point going crazy trying to get this car on the road.
#18
Yep, I am one of them. Of course, my battery was 8 years old, but the car has been good ever since.
#19
Cars fixed by a new battery are all over the UK forum, too.
Major advantages of changing a battery are it's cheap and DIY. Many other things fail on one or both of those
#20
I never heard anyone try an X-Type TB on an S-Type. No idea if it ought to work.
I was under the impression that X-Type and S-Type VINs have nothing at all relevant to each other but am now wondering. Er... had a look at the Vehicle Spec PDF (in the stickies) and it looks like X-Types never have an Mxxxxx VIN.
With so many codes it's nearly always the battery. If it's not, normally you'd see which codes come back first but also study the codes PDF hard as well as the rest of JTIS, looking for what is in common and could be the underlying cause. The only one that I can think of that's at all common is the battery. That includes power & ground connections of course. Other grounds are where I might go looking next, in hope.
I was under the impression that X-Type and S-Type VINs have nothing at all relevant to each other but am now wondering. Er... had a look at the Vehicle Spec PDF (in the stickies) and it looks like X-Types never have an Mxxxxx VIN.
With so many codes it's nearly always the battery. If it's not, normally you'd see which codes come back first but also study the codes PDF hard as well as the rest of JTIS, looking for what is in common and could be the underlying cause. The only one that I can think of that's at all common is the battery. That includes power & ground connections of course. Other grounds are where I might go looking next, in hope.
Last edited by JagV8; 12-16-2013 at 04:45 PM.