Chapter 2 - A new beginning
So the daily needed replacement - winter was coming and I can't daily my 225 in the winter. A friend owns a Phase 1 172 and I always fancied a Clio Sport. They are rare here and all of them are run into the ground, so I needed an alternative. See, I kept the Scenic suspension for a reason - the 172 uses the Scenic hubs and brakes and I recently put new front brakes on the Scenic. The plan is to build a car with 172 Suspension but with a cheaper engine to run.
So here is the new daily:
It's a 2001 Clio 1.4 16v with DBW. The DBW is running in safe mode (2k RPM), the whole car is repainted poorly and it has been crashed into a ditch at least once in its lifetype.
Perfect. 1100 EUR later it was mine.
The throttle body harness looked abysmal and I concluded that probably that was the issue for the safe mode of the DBW.
But that was not it, even after rebuilding the harness the car was still running in safe mode. Okay, then it's the throttle body - the classic. Turns out there is two types for the K4x family of engines. The plastic Cartier throttle that they used for a few months and they started crapping out after a few months in warranty and the metal VDO throttle body.
Renault was fully aware the old throttle body was hot garbage and they started replacing the old Cartier throttles with VDO throttles as part of a service recall. They would usually replace the MGI Cartier throttle with the VDO one and run a software update via CLIP. The problem I have is that I don't have a Clip or the update CD that's needed to flash the new DBW map into the ECU - oh oooh. A simple throttle body replacement has turned into a bigger problem.
So I said to myself - "well the throttle body can't be that different - its a motor with two pots - the ECU should run it".
75 EUR later a metal throttle body was sourced.
So that should solve it, right? Nope. The car didn't want to idle, the DBW map was wrong.
Crap.
Since the car I salvaged the throttle body from was running and driving for another 125 EUR i decided to get the ECU and UCH. The ECU is the
exact same part number only it has the updated DBW map for the VDO throttle body.
I install the ECU/UCH and the car starts and idles. WIN! Or so I thought...when touching the throttle the car immediately goes into safe mode again. So back to the drawing table.
This whole time the "check injection" light (heater) was on and I decided to take a look at the real-time data for the DBW using Renolink - and behold one of the tracks on the pedal is missing. So the pedal is dead? No, I looked - it's brand new.
Renault in their infinite wisdom decided that using 3 connectors between the pedal and ECU (two of the three soaked in water) was a good idea. I checked the wiring on the ECU connector and i was missing 3 wires from the pedal to the ECU. This was also a known issue to Renault and there has been
another recall for this matter. The solution? Run 1m of throttle cables straight from the pedal, through the cable throttle hole in the bulkhead straight to the ECU.
There is a repair kit available (looks like this) so I decided to build it myself - i chopped the wires off the connector and extended them, and crimped them directly to the ECU.
So NOW it should work, no? Nope.
Now I do see the second track of the pedal, have no check injection light BUT the car revs up to 4k, and goes again into safe mode. Funny thing was - there was SO MUCH water in the exhaust from condensation from being driven in safe mode around I needed to sweep afterwards.
I decided to call it quits and try tomorrow.