Page 1 of 1
c/oil buzzer of doom
Posted: 22 Sep 2008, 21:41
by edoh
i read a while back that a sure fire way of removing the 'oil buzzer of doom' sound and light on the dash - was by removing the thinnest wire from the coil (having ensured that your van isn't really suffering from low oil pressure).
i've got 5 wires coming from the coil - 2 that arrive together and go the bottom left of the coil - and one that goes to the bottom right of the coil - all black (looking down on the coil). The 2 top wires - are green and green black -
see photos
any ideas which wire might be 'the buzzer' wire? how to find out?
any comments/suggestions appreciated -
any ideas what the different wires to the coil might be/ -
all useful learning -
[IMG:120:160]
http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj89 ... eblack.jpg[/img]
[IMG:120:160]
http://i270.photobucket.com/albums/jj89 ... tocoil.jpg[/img]
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 08:07
by Ian Hulley
I believe you'll find it's the brown wire that passes down past the waterpump and to the sender next to the oil pump.
Ian.
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 08:08
by ermie571
post deleted as it was utter nonsense...see below
sorry folks
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 08:15
by Mocki
ermie571 wrote:u sure about removing a lead from the coil? Why would the signal be taken from there?
Blacks are earths.
Not sure what the greens do - other than provide a trigger signal for the engine running (its where my after market tachometer is wired to)
Em
x
BLACKS ARE LIVES
BROWNS ARE NEG
GREEN IS SIGNAL to rev counter, and dash, so it knows what revs to buz at!
removing signal only works if you dont have rev counter..........
replacing duff senders is the only fix if it isnt the wiring or oil pressure at fault
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 08:19
by ghost123uk
Don't bodge it ( except to get you home ) one day you may regret it.
The senders are not dear and not difficult to replace.
The one by the water pump looks pretty inaccessible but you can get to it from underneath, I did mine a while back.
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 08:38
by Ian Hulley
ghost123uk wrote:Don't bodge it ( except to get you home ) one day you may regret it.
The senders are not dear and not difficult to replace.
The one by the water pump looks pretty inaccessible but you can get to it from underneath, I did mine a while back.
IIRC you can't take it out without taking off the silencer and the heatshield, some have had a piece cut out of the shield to get to this sensor.
Ian
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 08:46
by ghost123uk
Ian Hulley wrote:ghost123uk wrote:Don't bodge it ( except to get you home ) one day you may regret it.
The senders are not dear and not difficult to replace.
The one by the water pump looks pretty inaccessible but you can get to it from underneath, I did mine a while back.
IIRC you can't take it out without taking off the silencer and the heatshield, some have had a piece cut out of the shield to get to this sensor.
Ian
Not so on my van Ian, was a bit tricky to get a spanner on but it did come out with no removals or mods.
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 08:52
by edoh
as usual -
all really useful contributions -
thanks everyone -
will check wiring/sender before anything else -

Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 09:04
by ghost123uk
You can check the sender by the water pump by earthing the brown wire that goes to it. If the buzzer stops misbehaving it is that one at fault.
The other one ( on the head ) works the other way round and is "earthed" at rest and goes open circuit when running ( with good oil pressure of course ! )
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 09:40
by Ian Hulley
ghost123uk wrote: You can check the sender by the water pump by earthing the brown wire that goes to it. If the buzzer stops misbehaving it is that one at fault.
Make sure there isn't a real fault with the system though .... otherwise it's like sticking your fingers in your ears
Ian.
Posted: 23 Sep 2008, 21:11
by edoh
folk singing - here i come!
