grayham
Guest
Folks,
My secondary air pump is full of rusty water, and as dead as a dead thing that's been deaded a couple of times to make sure that it's dead. I've found various people who say that the likely cause of this is a faulty combi valve, letting exhaust fumes into the pump, which condense in the pump and bugger it. I've ordered a new combi valve, and am in the process of tracking down a new pump.
My question is this: if I understand things correctly, the N249 controls the combi valve. Supposing the N249 were at fault rather than the combi valve - how would I know? I have no fault codes relating directly to the N249 (just the 'incorrect flow detected' code), but can I be sure that this means that the N249 is OK? I don't want to install a new pump and combi valve only to have the new pump buggered too because I didn't fix the real cause!
Thanks very much.
My secondary air pump is full of rusty water, and as dead as a dead thing that's been deaded a couple of times to make sure that it's dead. I've found various people who say that the likely cause of this is a faulty combi valve, letting exhaust fumes into the pump, which condense in the pump and bugger it. I've ordered a new combi valve, and am in the process of tracking down a new pump.
My question is this: if I understand things correctly, the N249 controls the combi valve. Supposing the N249 were at fault rather than the combi valve - how would I know? I have no fault codes relating directly to the N249 (just the 'incorrect flow detected' code), but can I be sure that this means that the N249 is OK? I don't want to install a new pump and combi valve only to have the new pump buggered too because I didn't fix the real cause!
Thanks very much.