B
Bimmer Owner
One key question in all this is if the interface from car to "resistor
block" is some kind of simple digital interface, ie it sends some bits
that get interpreted as "go to speed 3" or does it send a PWM signal.
All I know is that the HVAC controller sends a 2.0 VDC to 7.8 VDC signal
to one of the five pins of the FSU. I presume that directly corresponds
to the desired blower motor speed - but that is conjecture on my part.
How fast are these things failing for those that want to make their own?
The originals fail within about 5 years. I've had my second one fail in
3 years. I think we can safely say about 3 to 5 years is the lifecycle
but nobody really knows for sure (least of all me).
The failure on that X5 resulted in the blower draining the battery
when the car was off. Blower ran fine. Only odd thing in retrospect
was that when the car was off, a couple times I heard a faint noise.
This is one of the classic failure indications! Very very very common!
However, another classic failure indication, other than the dead
battery in the morning, is a blower that has a "mind of its own".
Together, those two sets of symptoms account for 99% of the failures.
Of all the anecdotal evidence presented, I don't think I've ever heard
of a failure being that the system was totally dead.
What that tells us, I don't know.