I am going to attempt this, especially to replace my CPS and alternator wires. Is there anything I should know before I attempt this?
Rebuilding an engine harness
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I believe there are screws that hold the connector together. Remove the screws and it comes apart.
What exactly are you trying to accomplish?Comment
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it definitely comes apart. once you take the screw out, you have to remove the rubber gasket and push it apart.
You can get a pin removal tool, but I'd just push them out and replace the pins with new ones. Of course, you are going to need a 3 pin shielded wire for the CPS (2 conductors & the jacket). it's all one piece so you might have to source it from another harness.Comment
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Yeah I figured that out today. It comes apart easily once that rubber gasket is off. I didn't think about the covering for the 3 wires acrually shielding the wires. I was planning on replacing the wires with similar gauge wires and wrapping with vinyl harness wrap. But I can see how shielding the cps wires would be really important. I'll figure something out.
Regardless, I ordered a used harness already so I hope if I screw up here, the replacement will be good.AWD > RWDComment
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yeah I don't think so. it's basically a 1 piece wire from the CPS to the DME. the easiest way to replace it would be to remove one from another harness. any E30 or E36 OBD1 harness would workComment
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I DD my e36, so time is not an issue. The used one I ordered should be here by the 1st, so it's not like that one is that far away either. Thanks though.
So really, I'm just messing around in the mean time to try and diagnose the issue before the other harness arrives. It sure would suck if this was not the cause of the hiccup/momentary loss of timing data I'm experiencing. If nothing changes with the replacement harness, I'll try to build a fully new harness.AWD > RWDComment
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