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G4 Xtreme Fault code 84


Paul1436215430

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Hi Guys,

Had an issue at a race meet at the weekend. no mechanical changes were made to the car nor wiring, or ecu settings.

after what appears to be sustained periods on the brakes ( end of the straight) scenario it appears that the ecu is failing to reach target position for the Bosch DBW and is sitting the controller at max DC% until the ecu goes into fault with Code 84. which from having researched as much as i can on this before posting is because, at sustained high DC the controller will either be getting very hot or exceeding the maximum permit-able current.

Im just hoping for some insights into what could have caused this as nothing has changed setup wise with the car. attached is a screenshot log (the actual log is too big to upload), of whats going on.throttle body is only a few months old and was a brand new genuine item. ecu is a G4+ Xtreme Black. 

Earlier in the log, you can see that the only way to get the ethrottle to re-activate was to shut the car down (kill isolator) then restart.

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You're right, it does appear to be shutting down due to over temp.  However in most cases where it has shut down the motor duty cycle was only around -25% DC at the time, so assuming a typical motor load I would expect it should normally be happy to run all day at that.  The periods that you see with it sitting at -80% DC is actually after it has shut off - you can tell as the spring pushes the TP back to 6% which is its neutral position.  

So something is making it run hotter than it should be.  The logged ecu temperature looks fine so I think that leaves 2 other possibilities:

  1. The load connected to aux9/10 is higher than expected (low resistance).  This could be a partial short in the motor windings or wiring etc.  It wouldnt hurt to pull the aux 9 & 10 wires out of the ecu connector and measure the resistance across those two wires.  I dont really know what to expect as I havent measured one for a long time but if it measured less than about 2ohms then I would probably research it a bit more to see if I could confirm what is normal.
  2. The second possibility would be an internal hardware issue such as the heatsink come unstuck or a bad connection/pcb track/solder join causing more heat than normal to be generated.  If the motor resistance checks out then I would suggest you contact tech support to get the ecu checked out.
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