
Originally Posted by
m3driver97
I recently completed the removal and repair of the instrument cluster for my 93 M5. Problem was intermittent temp gauge dropping to the left so I was frequently driving without a temperature gauge reading (a little risky with this car).
Read all the forum articles on this repair (bad capacitors) and decided to go ahead and order the caps to replace the bad ones. Decided to try the removal procedure w/o removing the steering wheel (wiggle out between dash & extended steering wheel) which worked out fine.
Somewhere in the excitement of making this repair and the reinstallation of the instrument cluster gauge, I had forgotten to turn off the ignition key and the turn signals (I pulled the unit out between the wheel and the dash w/o removing the steering wheel or disconnecting the SRS) before I hooked up the battery. I was surprised at the size of the spark that I saw when I put the negative terminal back on the battery but completed the job and tightened up the connection. When I got back to the driver's seat, I saw that the ignition switch had been on, along with the left turn signal and the headlights. Turned the key off and put everything else back where it belonged.
The moment of truth was here. I started up the car and was going for a drive to see how effective the repair was in fixing the temp. gauge. The first thing that I noticed was a flashing SRS light (which I had never had before). Not sure how this happened as I never hooked up the battery until all 4 instrument cluster connectors were plugged in and locked and none of the SRS connectors or steering wheel were ever touched. Bottom line, after a few minutes of driving, the flashing SRS light went to a continuous-on SRS light and my temp. gauge started acting up again. Now I am worse off than when I started.
Here are my questions:
1). Is there any tool that I can buy which will allow me to reset the SRS light without going to the dealer? The Peake RS/SRS tool that I found shows that is for use in 1994-2000 BMW's only. Can't find any tool which will handle 1993 or earlier. Am I stuck going to the dealer? If so, what type of charge should I expect?
2). Where is the SRS "error" stored? Is it in the instrument panel logic, the ECU, or some other dedicated piece of electronics?
3). If I buy a used instrument cluster (blue-back unit) and swap out the PC board, is there any special procedure to move the coding plug from my current unit to the replacement PC board without causing yet another problem? I don't want the coding plug to get screwed up causing the mileage to get lost.
Thanks in advance for any help/guidance any of you experts can provide me...
Regards, Brent