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peugeot bipper 1.4 hid fault


pestcontrol1
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I bought a (54)Partner van about 7 years ago and after a few months it would not start soon after stopping the engine, but was OK after about 2 hours. Someone told me to disconnect and reconnect the battery so that the computer rebooted. I didn't want to do that because I had heard that could cause other problems. People were telling me all sorts of things that it could be. It had been unused for a week or so and when I tried to start it there was a 'grunt' and all the ignition lights went out and the battery was flat. I started it with jump leads, took it to a garage, leaving the engine running, and they thought it was worth trying a flywheel sensor, which they ordered. I drove it home and it has been starting OK ever since(till it was written off in an accident), leaving me with a spare un-needed flywheel sensor. SO! Try disconnecting the battery.

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Hi Its a deisel so doesnt have a cat as such....your fuel temp sensor is on your fuel lines in the engine bay normally a 2 pin red connector on it

I assume you have a lack of power

 

hth Jim

Hi Jim

No lack of power it did when the light came on first time but when i turned it off it came out of limp mode but the light stayed on

ps i will have a look for the sensor on friday morning see if i can find them :good:

Edited by pestcontrol1
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I bought a (54)Partner van about 7 years ago and after a few months it would not start soon after stopping the engine, but was OK after about 2 hours. Someone told me to disconnect and reconnect the battery so that the computer rebooted. I didn't want to do that because I had heard that could cause other problems. People were telling me all sorts of things that it could be. It had been unused for a week or so and when I tried to start it there was a 'grunt' and all the ignition lights went out and the battery was flat. I started it with jump leads, took it to a garage, leaving the engine running, and they thought it was worth trying a flywheel sensor, which they ordered. I drove it home and it has been starting OK ever since(till it was written off in an accident), leaving me with a spare un-needed flywheel sensor. SO! Try disconnecting the battery.

Il try out thats not guna cost me out lol

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Hi all i have a fault on my van and its doing my head in the code is p0138 fuel temp sensor A circuit high input ????

but i can"t find much out about it like

Where it is

How to fix

or what it is

Dose anyone have any ideas plz

Cheers

PC1

 

P0138 is an 02 sensor circuit high code! P0183 is a fuel temp circuit high code.

 

The easiest, quickest and cheapest way to sort your problem is to find a REPUTABLE PROFESSIONAL DIAGNOSTIC SPECIALIST. Trust me it's gonna be much cheaper and less painfull than following the **** being passed off as help in this thread so far, however well intentioned it may have been.

 

There is absolutely no point throwing parts at a problem if no attempt has been made to identify the root cause.

 

Is it the sensor? wiring? ECM? excessive fuel temp caused by excessive fuel pressure or some other fuel system fault? fuel cooler fault? I don't know without carrying out a thorough diagnosis so there's no way anyone else on here will know either.

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P0138 is an 02 sensor circuit high code! P0183 is a fuel temp circuit high code.

 

The easiest, quickest and cheapest way to sort your problem is to find a REPUTABLE PROFESSIONAL DIAGNOSTIC SPECIALIST. Trust me it's gonna be much cheaper and less painfull than following the **** being passed off as help in this thread so far, however well intentioned it may have been.

 

There is absolutely no point throwing parts at a problem if no attempt has been made to identify the root cause.

 

Is it the sensor? wiring? ECM? excessive fuel temp caused by excessive fuel pressure or some other fuel system fault? fuel cooler fault? I don't know without carrying out a thorough diagnosis so there's no way anyone else on here will know either.

My fat fingers and i dint see it the code is P0183 fuel temp circuit high i have had it in the garage twice now with no joy up to now but i have noticed this last few days that its not as good on fuel as it was for some reason i dont know

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do not know the car,but, if it is diesel,, Check over flow pipes, and all connections to fuel lines, even the one from the tank RUST.

if there are sensors involved, just like the old engines of Yor, take sensors off one at a time, I did on a blokes turned out it was oxygen sensor on inlet manifold, if it doesn`t change the way its behaving keep pulling them off.

check for air or water in the fuel filter bowl, always worth cleaning anyway..

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P0138 is an 02 sensor circuit high code! P0183 is a fuel temp circuit high code.

 

The easiest, quickest and cheapest way to sort your problem is to find a REPUTABLE PROFESSIONAL DIAGNOSTIC SPECIALIST. Trust me it's gonna be much cheaper and less painfull than following the **** being passed off as help in this thread so far, however well intentioned it may have been.

 

There is absolutely no point throwing parts at a problem if no attempt has been made to identify the root cause.

 

Is it the sensor? wiring? ECM? excessive fuel temp caused by excessive fuel pressure or some other fuel system fault? fuel cooler fault? I don't know without carrying out a thorough diagnosis so there's no way anyone else on here will know either.

Bob on, howeverfinding someone as estute is not so easy!

 

A clue is given in the fault description that everyone is overlooking!

Often a fault code is not implying a sensor is faulty! It is telling you the sensor has detected a fault!

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My fat fingers and i dint see it the code is P0183 fuel temp circuit high i have had it in the garage twice now with no joy up to now but i have noticed this last few days that its not as good on fuel as it was for some reason i dont know

 

 

Mate, I cannot stress enough, you need a reputable DIAGNOSTIC SPECIALIST, every garage and his dog has a sign saying "Diagnostics" but there's a world of difference between pulling a code and replacing the component mentioned in the code description, or, testing components and verifying data! labour rates may run in the £50-£70/hr range, but a good diagnostic technician should be able to diagnose the root cause of your problem within an hour, so as I said earlier, it's ultimately cheaper than throwing parts at it or paying monkeys to stand around scratching their heads. :)

 

Bob on, howeverfinding someone as estute is not so easy!

 

A clue is given in the fault description that everyone is overlooking!

Often a fault code is not implying a sensor is faulty! It is telling you the sensor OR ECM has detected a fault,

 

 

Best reply so far! :good:

Edited by Bad Monkey
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