What did you do to your 996TT today?
Black is tough to maintain but looks amazing right after cleaning. I have used my pressure washer a few times on vehicles and it doesn't seem to do much compared to scrubbing with a mitt. I try to scrub front to back in lines to avoid swirl marks. I use a leaf blower or handheld Makita blower to get as much water off as possible before using a waffle weave drying towel. Are you drying completely with a blower?
Which front lip is that?
Which front lip is that?
Just fitted the GT2 clutch power spring to my GT2 clutch slave. What a difference, pedal is now acceptable. The green turbo spring I could push in by hand. The bluey purple spring I couldn't.
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Burning Brakes
Took off my F-pipe today so I could get to the oil pressure sender unit as it's been giving me issues lately. It was extremely nerve racking getting into boost and watching the oil pressure gauge go to 0!
I managed to disconnect them and took a small wire brush and did my best to clean them up ( they werent that dirty tbh) and plugged them back in. Took it out for a drive and to get a late night dinner and all seems well so far. It's been replaced before so I imagine its probably on its way out so ill have to get a new one soon.
I managed to disconnect them and took a small wire brush and did my best to clean them up ( they werent that dirty tbh) and plugged them back in. Took it out for a drive and to get a late night dinner and all seems well so far. It's been replaced before so I imagine its probably on its way out so ill have to get a new one soon.
Burning Brakes
I am trying to clear an airbag light with my Foxwell NT630. This is not a Porsche specific scantool. For the regions (USA, Japan, Europe, etc.), do those correlate to the manufacturing location or codes specific to those regions? Probably a dumb question but I don't want to fry anything.
I use a microfiber mitt. I replace them or downgrade them to lower body panels as they loose their softness. Cool on the dryer. Not sure it would work here in 90% humidity though. The blower I use definitely reduces the number of towels required to dry off the car though. The Aerokit wing alone holds a ton of water. Gotcha, that is pretty typical. Ebay has cheap aftermarket replacement lips.
The USA option only had domestic vehicles. The scanner has an Airbag option as well as SRS. The SRS menu did not have the 996 in it's list. The Airbag option is where the regions are. I went to Europe and selected Porsche. The 996 option was in there and it showed a passenger seat belt buckle fault. I guess that is used to turn on the door airbag if someone is sitting there. I reset it. Hopefully it doesn't come back as I am due for an inspection.
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The USA option only had domestic vehicles. The scanner has an Airbag option as well as SRS. The SRS menu did not have the 996 in it's list. The Airbag option is where the regions are. I went to Europe and selected Porsche. The 996 option was in there and it showed a passenger seat belt buckle fault. I guess that is used to turn on the door airbag if someone is sitting there. I reset it. Hopefully it doesn't come back as I am due for an inspection.
ROW Turbos just provide ground if buckled, open circuit if unbuckled. But no SRS faults were set either way, and no SRS fault if the belt receptacle is electrically disconnected.
It's simple enough to basically defeat the extra SRS safety check that only US cars have: Unbuckle the seat belt connector and stick in a 100 ohm resistor between the two wires that would otherwise go to the buckle. Will eliminate the annoying door buzzer as well.
My understanding is that this was due to the US DOT regulations at the time that required the SRS system to explicitedly check if the person was bucked AND verify that the seat belt detection circuit was fully functional every ignition cycle. Unbuckled, you get no belt, no airbag and go ballistic.
Same sort of misguided safety regulations that prevented adaptive/matrix headlights from being implemented in the US for years. And restricted H4 headlights for years before that.
Last edited by pfbz; 08-01-2024 at 05:16 PM.
I opened the fuse block in my new to me ‘05 turbo S
to be certain how to use the dead-battery system as well as plan to purchase some spare fuses.
I love this car, the block was beautiful and included table of fuse positions, perfectly brief graphic instructions for battery boost, and - wow- a fuse puller with spare fuses in every amperage needed!
It’s another I Love Porsche feature
to be certain how to use the dead-battery system as well as plan to purchase some spare fuses.
I love this car, the block was beautiful and included table of fuse positions, perfectly brief graphic instructions for battery boost, and - wow- a fuse puller with spare fuses in every amperage needed!
It’s another I Love Porsche feature
In case you haven't yet experienced it? These cars are voltage hogs to the point it can feel like a parasitic draw. I always double lock the car with the fob ( dbl click it ) to fully shut off the ECU also. Just some helpful tips to keep the ignition key working and able to start as it should.
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rituxumab (08-01-2024)
Only on US 996 Turbos, the seat belt buckle shows one resistance if unbuckled (400 ohms) and a second resistance if buckled (100 ohms). If the seat belt electrical connector is disconnected and ignition is turned on, the computer sees zero ohms and sets an airbag fault, which can only be reset with certain scanners or PIWIS. Can also happen if the connector glitches, or the wiring gets chaffed, or whatever.
ROW Turbos just provide ground if buckled, open circuit if unbuckled. But no SRS faults were set either way, and no SRS fault if the belt receptacle is electrically disconnected.
It's simple enough to basically defeat the extra SRS safety check that only US cars have: Unbuckle the seat belt connector and stick in a 100 ohm resistor between the two wires that would otherwise go to the buckle. Will eliminate the annoying door buzzer as well.
My understanding is that this was due to the US DOT regulations at the time that required the SRS system to explicitedly check if the person was bucked AND verify that the seat belt detection circuit was fully functional every ignition cycle. Unbuckled, you get no belt, no airbag and go ballistic.
Same sort of misguided safety regulations that prevented adaptive/matrix headlights from being implemented in the US for years. And restricted H4 headlights for years before that.
ROW Turbos just provide ground if buckled, open circuit if unbuckled. But no SRS faults were set either way, and no SRS fault if the belt receptacle is electrically disconnected.
It's simple enough to basically defeat the extra SRS safety check that only US cars have: Unbuckle the seat belt connector and stick in a 100 ohm resistor between the two wires that would otherwise go to the buckle. Will eliminate the annoying door buzzer as well.
My understanding is that this was due to the US DOT regulations at the time that required the SRS system to explicitedly check if the person was bucked AND verify that the seat belt detection circuit was fully functional every ignition cycle. Unbuckled, you get no belt, no airbag and go ballistic.
Same sort of misguided safety regulations that prevented adaptive/matrix headlights from being implemented in the US for years. And restricted H4 headlights for years before that.
I think the last time I drove the Turbo was last August maybe September. Finally have few hours to take it out and wash it a go for a nice drive. Now I need to clean the interior, about 1/2 lb of foam kept going through the vents when I turned on the AC.
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vtec_ (08-02-2024)
Burning Brakes
The USA option only had domestic vehicles. The scanner has an Airbag option as well as SRS. The SRS menu did not have the 996 in it's list. The Airbag option is where the regions are. I went to Europe and selected Porsche. The 996 option was in there and it showed a passenger seat belt buckle fault. I guess that is used to turn on the door airbag if someone is sitting there. I reset it. Hopefully it doesn't come back as I am due for an inspection.
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Initial thoughts on the BC coilovers (non Porsche) are positive.
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kamlung (08-02-2024)
It's just a $100 Foxwell scanner but certainly an upgrade from my $20 Autel. I have not used it much to know all the options. I mainly bought for the ABS pump cycling but didn't use that feature when I bled the brakes.