I recently did some work on my 2006 V70 2.5T:
-- Refurbished the turbo
-- Replaced the front engine seals (oil pump gasket, crank seal, cam seals)
-- Replaced the water pump & seal
-- Replaced timing belt, tensioner & idler pulley
-- Installed a bluetooth adapter on the factory radio https://www.vivaperformance.com/bluetoo ... p2-models/
The car sat for a while, since I had to do this work bit by bit. Once I was finished, the battery had drained. So, I plugged I hooked up my old, grungy battery charger that I inherited from my father-in-law. Put it in start mode (50 amps) so that I could fire up the car. But then my son came outside and I got distracted. All this time, the charger was on, and the battery was hooked up to the car
I didn't immediately realize what I'd done, but when I finally went to start the car, it wouldn't fire up. (I will come close, but it never quite runs.) Then all sorts of error lights came on. I know it isn't a mechanical timing issue: I had the cams locked, everything is marked clearly, and I cranked the engine by hand several times to make sure the timing marks remained synced up. So, my guess is that I overcharged the system when I left the charger plugged in.
Scanned with VDASH, and here's what I get: So, I'm afraid that I may have fried a bunch of sensors, and maybe even damaged the ECU or TCM.
I'm not sure it's worth chasing down all the possible electrical problems, especially since modules and sensors can be so expensive. And I understand that replacing/reprogramming the ECU and/or TCM can get expensive.
Any thoughts or suggestions?
Jared in NRV Virginia
- '88 240 DL Wagon (wife totaled)
- '98 V70
- '01 V70 T5
- '06 V70 2.5T (on life support)







