After tons of reading and research, I determined that a call to Xemodex was in order. They suggested we heat the CEM with a hair dryer to see if we could replicate the symptoms. Sure enough, after about five minutes the car started freaking out again. Problem identified, or so we thought. Pulled the CEM, sent it off to Xemodex, which they promptly identified as having a fault. They did a program transfer and sent back a new one. We installed it back in the car, and viola, everything worked great (we still had the SRS error, but knew that was another fish to fry).
We run the car for 10 minutes or so, feeling pretty proud of ourselves over the accomplishment, as we put tools and work lights away. Then it came time to shut the car off and lock it up for the night. This is where things get interesting.
Once the car was off, we locked it with the FOB. The locks all engage, but then we notice the dashboard LED is fast blinking. Hmmm, why is it doing that? Did it always do that? No, that's definitely weird. I ask him to unlock the car. FOB doesn't work now. We manually unlock the door and there are no interior lights. Uh oh. We try to start the car. Starts, but dies in about five seconds with nothing displaying on the DIM. Climate controls all work, though. Try to restart. Cranks but doesn't start. Try again. Starts for a few seconds and dies. We try pulling the fuse as we have in the past to recover. Now the alarm goes off when we put the fuse back in.
To recap, we mailed off a faulty CEM that was causing intermittent trouble, and replaced it with a new and upgraded CEM. Now the car is completely dead in the water. Called Xemodex and they suggested disconnecting the positive and negative leads from the battery and shorting them out on each other for 30 minutes. Tried that, didn't work. They are also at a loss as to why this fix has completely regressed the car, although state that they've seen all sorts of freaky electrical things over the years, so this goes down as "one of those." They're looking into sending a new unit, but with all the quality control checks they doubt it's a faulty unit. Now we can't even connect the battery without the alarm going off.
Here are my best guesses why this is happening:
- 1. Although the CEM was faulty, it was caused by another source. Not sure I really believe this because it was very typical CEM failure as mentioned by lots of people.
- 2. Maybe the FOB needed to be reprogrammed, and now the FOB and the car don't "know" each other anymore and need to be reset.
- 3. Maybe the immobilizer is trashed
- 4. Maybe the CEM from Xemodex was faulty out the door.






