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Oren[_2_] March 27th 14 11:51 PM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?

[email protected] March 28th 14 12:19 AM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:51:29 -0700, Oren wrote:

(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?

I would pretty well rule out the sensors at the bumper. Clock spring
problems are pretty common. Make sure to follow ALL safety warnings
and procedures. With the air bags removed you can check continuity
safely with a multimeter.

Oren[_2_] March 28th 14 12:34 AM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 20:19:07 -0400, wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:51:29 -0700, Oren wrote:

(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?

I would pretty well rule out the sensors at the bumper. Clock spring
problems are pretty common. Make sure to follow ALL safety warnings
and procedures. With the air bags removed you can check continuity
safely with a multimeter.


Will do. And thank you. I appreciate it.

Oren[_2_] March 28th 14 10:45 PM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 20:19:07 -0400, wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:51:29 -0700, Oren wrote:

(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?

I would pretty well rule out the sensors at the bumper. Clock spring
problems are pretty common. Make sure to follow ALL safety warnings
and procedures. With the air bags removed you can check continuity
safely with a multimeter.


Clare,

Another question. Is the Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 2 ohm
resistor that simulates an air bag connection necessary?

I've read of two places to connect it. Both make sense. One at the
steering wheel and one below the dash. I'm the student :)

[email protected] March 29th 14 12:25 AM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 15:45:08 -0700, Oren wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 20:19:07 -0400, wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:51:29 -0700, Oren wrote:

(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?

I would pretty well rule out the sensors at the bumper. Clock spring
problems are pretty common. Make sure to follow ALL safety warnings
and procedures. With the air bags removed you can check continuity
safely with a multimeter.


Clare,

Another question. Is the Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 2 ohm
resistor that simulates an air bag connection necessary?

I've read of two places to connect it. Both make sense. One at the
steering wheel and one below the dash. I'm the student :)

If you connect below the dash and the code goes away, and you install
it at the wheel and it doesn't, you KNOW the clock-spring is the
problem. You can buy a 2 ohm resistor for less than a buck, or the
Rotunda tool for about $40. The advantage of the real tool is it has
the right connector. Go to a body shop or wrecker and beg a discharged
air-bag, snip off the connector, and make your own tool??

Oren[_2_] March 29th 14 01:05 AM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 20:25:34 -0400, wrote:

On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 15:45:08 -0700, Oren wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 20:19:07 -0400,
wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:51:29 -0700, Oren wrote:

(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?
I would pretty well rule out the sensors at the bumper. Clock spring
problems are pretty common. Make sure to follow ALL safety warnings
and procedures. With the air bags removed you can check continuity
safely with a multimeter.


Clare,

Another question. Is the Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 2 ohm
resistor that simulates an air bag connection necessary?

I've read of two places to connect it. Both make sense. One at the
steering wheel and one below the dash. I'm the student :)

If you connect below the dash and the code goes away, and you install
it at the wheel and it doesn't, you KNOW the clock-spring is the
problem. You can buy a 2 ohm resistor for less than a buck, or the
Rotunda tool for about $40. The advantage of the real tool is it has
the right connector. Go to a body shop or wrecker and beg a discharged
air-bag, snip off the connector, and make your own tool??


Thanks, I need more study. To know if I need the adapter or if a
continuity test can be competed without it.

Oren[_2_] March 29th 14 11:21 PM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 20:25:34 -0400, wrote:

On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 15:45:08 -0700, Oren wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 20:19:07 -0400,
wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:51:29 -0700, Oren wrote:

(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?
I would pretty well rule out the sensors at the bumper. Clock spring
problems are pretty common. Make sure to follow ALL safety warnings
and procedures. With the air bags removed you can check continuity
safely with a multimeter.


Clare,

Another question. Is the Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 2 ohm
resistor that simulates an air bag connection necessary?

I've read of two places to connect it. Both make sense. One at the
steering wheel and one below the dash. I'm the student :)

If you connect below the dash and the code goes away, and you install
it at the wheel and it doesn't, you KNOW the clock-spring is the
problem. You can buy a 2 ohm resistor for less than a buck, or the
Rotunda tool for about $40. The advantage of the real tool is it has
the right connector. Go to a body shop or wrecker and beg a discharged
air-bag, snip off the connector, and make your own tool??


Thanks Clare. I'm on the study...preparing when I tackle this project.
It maybe third on my list now. I still have at least four unfinished
do-dads

I'm closer and think this is the clock-spring.

[email protected] March 30th 14 03:24 AM

PING Clare (Canada)
 
On Sat, 29 Mar 2014 16:21:48 -0700, Oren wrote:

On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 20:25:34 -0400, wrote:

On Fri, 28 Mar 2014 15:45:08 -0700, Oren wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 20:19:07 -0400,
wrote:

On Thu, 27 Mar 2014 16:51:29 -0700, Oren wrote:

(1994 Ford Bronco 138K miles.)

Air Bag repair question: Flash Code is 3-2

“Driver Air Bag Circuit Resistance High or open.”

Doing research, suggestions are a sensor in the circuit, perhaps
behind the front grill. These parts are hard wired in the air bag
system.

Another suggestions is the coil spring in the steering column which
indicate this is the problem in 95% of the cases for this code flash.

I can replace the coil spring – following ALL the warnings to disarm
the air bag and following my research.

Would you think it is the coil spring as the sensors have not been
damaged by an accident?

A coil spring is ~$70 vs $250- $300 for shop repair.

A Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 is a 2 ohm resistor that
simulates an air bag connection. That would be another DIY cost if in
90-95% of cases it is just the coil spring.

Thoughts?
I would pretty well rule out the sensors at the bumper. Clock spring
problems are pretty common. Make sure to follow ALL safety warnings
and procedures. With the air bags removed you can check continuity
safely with a multimeter.

Clare,

Another question. Is the Rotunda Air Bag Simulator 105-00010 2 ohm
resistor that simulates an air bag connection necessary?

I've read of two places to connect it. Both make sense. One at the
steering wheel and one below the dash. I'm the student :)

If you connect below the dash and the code goes away, and you install
it at the wheel and it doesn't, you KNOW the clock-spring is the
problem. You can buy a 2 ohm resistor for less than a buck, or the
Rotunda tool for about $40. The advantage of the real tool is it has
the right connector. Go to a body shop or wrecker and beg a discharged
air-bag, snip off the connector, and make your own tool??


Thanks Clare. I'm on the study...preparing when I tackle this project.
It maybe third on my list now. I still have at least four unfinished
do-dads

I'm closer and think this is the clock-spring.


Like I said - not an uncommon problem.


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