Should it idle and run perfectly well with it off? Just did a 100 odd mile trip and it was flawless! In fact things seem better than when it was attached
CID sensor..
Moderator: martauto
Realised that the sensor and cable on my 318 cab has broken off the HT lead.I had no idea what the cable was for, but searched the wiki to see it should control injector firing.
Should it idle and run perfectly well with it off? Just did a 100 odd mile trip and it was flawless! In fact things seem better than when it was attached
Should it idle and run perfectly well with it off? Just did a 100 odd mile trip and it was flawless! In fact things seem better than when it was attached
The C101 plug is the where the engine loom joins to the car, on the bulkhead near the fusebox.
I think without the cid sensor connected, the injectors all fire together. The car will run fine without it, but I believe will be better and possibly more economical with it connected.
I think without the cid sensor connected, the injectors all fire together. The car will run fine without it, but I believe will be better and possibly more economical with it connected.
James
'91 325i Sport
'93 318i touring 16v
'91 325i Sport
'93 318i touring 16v
- Brianmoooore
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It's signal is used by the ECU so that it can fire the injectors in groups of two under certain conditions. Without its signal, the ECU has no idea which of a pair of cylinders is on its compression stroke, so has no option but to fire all four injectors at the same time.
Your engine will run fine without the signal, but it will run that little bit better with it, especially under part throttle conditions (i.e. most of the time), assuming everything else is as it should be.
Your engine will run fine without the signal, but it will run that little bit better with it, especially under part throttle conditions (i.e. most of the time), assuming everything else is as it should be.
http://84.45.115.78/e30zonewiki/index.php/CID
Righto.
Is that thing in the link above.I changed the HT leads and managed to snap it off! I assume you have to buy a genuine set of leads to replace it as there seemed no way other than cutting the leads to get it off and back on?
Righto.
Is that thing in the link above.I changed the HT leads and managed to snap it off! I assume you have to buy a genuine set of leads to replace it as there seemed no way other than cutting the leads to get it off and back on?
- Brianmoooore
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Plenty of second hand leads available, most in as good a condition as they were twenty years ago.
- Brianmoooore
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Nothing remotely to do with the C101!Boomy wrote:Just to confirm, this has nothing to do with the C101 bit mentioned? If not, where does the end of the CID lead go to? It looked to me like it ran down through the timing belt cover somewhere (was dark mind you).
Connects to one of the sockets on the wiring box under the inlet manifold.
- Brianmoooore
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Early M20s had a crank position sensor that only supplied a signal to the diagnostic socket.TPS wrote:I think it goes to the Black Diagnostic socket.
I have to go in the garage & look at the M40, My 325 has the 2 connectors one for the CPS & the another the HT lead sensor, below the diagnostic socket, I always thought the M40 was similar.

1991 325i Touring Alpine White II
1994 318i Touring Sterling Silver
- Brianmoooore
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On all but early M20 engines the two plugs fit into sockets under the diagnostic socket, but the wires don't go to it; they go to the ECU. Same on the M40, but the sockets are mounted further back.


