Mercedes 'leccy problem part II (more amusement for Pete M, I guess)

A couple of weeks back I mentioned that my newly aquired Merc 300TE had a lhs rear light that was playing up in the most interesting fashion - it seemed to have a live feed to the tail light even though the ignition was off, plus it appeared to be suffering from grounding problems at the rear light clusters.

After popping a couple of fuses in order to find out which circuits didn't want to play, I managed to improve the situation - the rhs rear light was now working properly, whereas the lhs tail light wasn't working at all. On top of that the rear interior lights had stopped working, too. Great improvement, that.

Today I finally managed to spend some time trying to trace the fault, only to find that part of the rear wiring loom (lhs, the one that goes over the inner wing to the rear light cluster and into the roof) had gone into proper meltdown mode. The loom looked a bit 'shrink wrapped' from the outside so I carefully cut it open. Took me a while to realise that the cables weren't glued together, it was the melted insulation on one cable that supplied the glue. Great. Looks like the damage is a little bit too extensive to repair unless I call in a pro as it looks like I'd need to cut out about five inches from the loom and replace all the cables. And that won't bring me any closer to finding out as to why it melted in the first place.

I guess I could try to find a secondhand loom and just replace it (would that be the time when someone tells me that this is actually the main rear loom and that I'd need to disassemble half the car just to get it in and out?). That, or stick it on fleabay as "spares or repair" and get myself another one...

Oh well, I guess my pot's half full...

Reply to
Timo Geusch
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Fixing the loom shouldn't be too difficult, work systematically and just match the colours up! Make sure the wire you use is as thick, or thicker than that you are replacing. Easy enough job, if a little time consuming. Make sure you use decent connections, (personally I always use crimps, scotchlocks are the work of the devil IMO!) For a neater job, stagger the joints, so you don't get a big lump where all the connections are in the loom. Don't tape the loom up yet, until you have gone through the fault finding below.

As for what caused the fault in the first place, that could be anything. First step would be to check every single fuse, to make sure none have been replaced with any of a higher rating(some peoples favourite botch up repair is to replace the 10amp fuse which keeps blowing with a 30!), then operate all the circuits that the loom feeds, to make sure they are all working properly. Likely candidates for the fault are...... wrong bulb fitted (single contact bulb where it should be a double contact = short across the terminals) Power socket in the boot overloaded Wires trapped/chaffed round boot lid hinges, or wires that go into boot lid broken where they flex with the lid.

When you do eventually find the fault, bear in mind that it may have caused damage in other places in the loom, if you cant get everything to work properly, then you are going to have to follow the loom down to check for any other patches of melted bits.

Reply to
SimonJ

It's the time consuming part that's the problem for me - I don't have that much spare time in the first place and a bit too much to do at the moment.

I wouldn't do anything but either crimp them in or solder them in, I've had enough problems with Scotchlocks myself.

*cough* not that I would ever do something like that...

Nope, already checked that.

What/where's that then?

I think they may have been chafing somewhere as another part of the loom tube had split open and the damaged cable had rubbed through the insulation there.

Hrmpf. This thing was bought as a throwaway car for a house moving I'm planning in a couple of months. I think with all the effort involved (given that it's the least desirable W124 300TE) I should probably think about re-ebaying it instead.

Reply to
Timo Geusch

For ebay values of "throw it away" in this case, I'd guess.

Oh well, there are plenty of 300TEs available...

Reply to
Timo Geusch

Scare me - how much was it ?

Reply to
Colin Wilson

In news: snipped-for-privacy@nermal.unix-consult.com, Timo Geusch decided to enlighten our sheltered souls with a rant as follows

You do know there's a BoL available for the W124, don't you Timo?

(My 124 is for sale if anyone wants a lovely, leather trimmed 260E)

Reply to
Pete M

Not that much - fivehundred quid plus 6 months tax. Should get a few hundred back if I ebay it again...

Reply to
Timo Geusch

Think it`d last long in Dovecot ? :-}

Reply to
Colin Wilson

Well, I've actually got the factory manuals for mine...

Unfortunately it's not of much use to me as I'm after a TE...

Reply to
Timo Geusch

In news: snipped-for-privacy@news.individual.net, Colin Wilson decided to enlighten our sheltered souls with a rant as follows

It's lasted six months in West Derby, and before that it lived in Crosby for a year or two.

I imagine it'd be fine in Dovecot :-p

Reply to
Pete M

West Derby and Crosby are relatively safe / affluent areas in comparison!

Reply to
Colin Wilson

In news: snipped-for-privacy@news.individual.net, Colin Wilson decided to enlighten our sheltered souls with a rant as follows

True, but the scrotes tend to come to West Derby to pinch stuff. I'm only half a mile or so from Dovecot and there's a little alleyway basically between here and Ackers Hall which they use as an escape route.

Rest of the time it's the braindeads from Cantril Farm who tend to nick stuff.

Reply to
Pete M

I was thinking Grange Avenue North for a moment, but that`s off Kingsheath... (my ol` man lives up there)

They`re too scared to come to Dovecot ! ;-)

Reply to
Colin Wilson

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