Hello fellow diesel mechanics,
"For the past 1.5 years, I've also been working on diesel engines occasionally, not just my Beetle. And my diesel is currently giving me some headaches. The vehicle is a VW Passat 3BG, 1.9 TDI, 130 hp, Highline (estate/wagon), manufactured in 2003, with almost all comfort features." It was purchased used, and the cruise control system was added later.
The following events occurred over the past 6 months:
In June 2022, after heavy rainfall, I discovered about 10 cm (approximately 4 inches) of water in the footwells on both the driver's side front and rear. The car was drained, and the drain passages at the front of the water tank were cleared.
In August 2022, during my road trip to Scandinavia, the rear left door closed and became stuck. No way to unlock the lock.
In December 2022, the rear left door will be completely disassembled, the lock will be broken out, and a replacement lock will be installed. This works perfectly.
December 2022 - 2 days after replacing the lock: the tailgate can only be opened unreliably. After some research, I discovered that the comfort control unit (KSG) 1C0 959 799B is located in the driver's footwell and is likely waterlogged. Until yesterday, I hadn't had time to fix it, but the trunk could still be opened by repeatedly pressing the open and close buttons or by firmly kicking the floor on the driver's side.
Yesterday, we removed the covers and other components and pulled the KSG (Comfort Control Unit) out from under the mat. Water was leaking out of the KSG, which apparently had been trapped inside. We opened the KSG and let it dry. This is what the plugs looked like...
Okay, so we cleaned the connectors on both sides, and then we observed the following:
PIN number 2 was completely rusted. PIN No. 6 was peculiar: an orange/brown cable was coming from the KSG (likely a control system or similar), which then entered a separate heat shrink tubing where it split into 5 cables of the same color, all of which were neatly separated from each other.
I then did some research and found the following information about the KSG online:
Application of a 1C0 comfort control unit for VAG, e.g., the 1C0 959 799B / 1C0959799B H01.
15-pin connector (the mating connector is, for example, 1J0962615).
2 - Interior monitoring.
3 - DWA Siren
4 -
5 - Head contact.
6 -
7 - R47: Antenna cable for central locking and anti-theft system - shielding.
8 -
9 - Interior monitoring.
10 - R47: Antenna cable for central locking and anti-theft system - antenna.
11 - DWA Horn.
12 - Terminal 30 - 12V
13 - Terminal 30 - 12V
14 - Right turn signal.
15 - Turn signal, left.
23-pin connector (the mating connector is, for example, 1J0962623).
1 - Door contact.
2 - Rear hatch opening.
3 - Rear hatch unlocking.
4 -
5 - Terminal 15
6 - CAN-LOW
7 - Rear hatch contact, level 2.
8 - Close the sunroof.
9 - CAN-HIGH
10 - Rear hatch contact, level 1.
11 - Diagnosis - K-Line
12 - Sunroof release.
13 - Lock cylinder contact.
14 - Instrument lighting.
15 -
16 - Mirror heating.
17 -
18 - Rear hatch unlocking.
19 -
20 - Interior light, terminal 30, -12V.
21 - Interior light, terminal 31, ground.
22 - Terminal 30 - 12V
23 - Terminal 31 - Ground
"In my opinion, the error was then obvious, and we simply soldered the cable for the tailgate opening (PIN 2) directly to the control unit because we didn't have the equipment to re-crimp those connectors. Well, that's the end of that; it probably didn't work. Then we thought: maybe it's missing the CAN LOW signal, so we soldered the 5 cables from the engine side to the single cable from the control unit." Still nothing.
Then we noticed that pin 3 was free, but there was a cable connected to pin 4 instead. So, we disconnected the cable from pin 4 and soldered it to pin 3. Still nothing.
So, it appears that all the problems we could perceive have been fixed, and yet the trunk still won't open. Can someone please help me before I lose my patience and set the car on fire?
Best regards,
Alex.
PS: Just as a note: my OBD2 device, when used with the CarScanner app, never displayed any error messages.