DanDweller
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- Nov 2, 2018
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Ok, I went down the rabbit hole so you don't have to (for anyone looking at getting a 2015 XL model of the Ford Transit Connect). There is no firmware update to be able to have the dealer reprogram the body control module in order to avoid the exterior running lights coming on every time a door is open, like there is with the 2017 model (and I don't know which other years). And the integrated door switch does not allow an easy fix right there at the door as on older cars by bypassing the switch. What you have to do is access the wiring harness that receives all the wires coming from all the door switches and connects to the body control module and which is found by the fuse box behind the glove compartment. A mechanic helped my by printing off a schematic, and then I snipped five different color-coded wires (for five doors) a few inches back from where they come out of the harness. Then I wired those five wires coming out of the harness (which connects to the control module) together and permanently grounded them to the car (there was already an empty bolt hole conveniently in the metal a few inches away). Since the door switches work by being grounded when the latch is shut and ungrounded when the latch is open, the control module now thinks the doors are always shut and those damn lights stay off except for when I choose to have them on by turning the running lights knob on the dash to the on position, like a normal car (or how a normal car used to be). The wires coming from the doors are now just dead wires. The keyless entry/power locks still work--different circuit.
Now if I could just figure out how to disable the feature which makes the doors automatically lock after being closed for a minute.... Since the module now always thinks the doors are shut, that feature is likely to be even more of a pain in the ass. (Did I mention I do not like excessive, pointless, overcomplicating automation?)
Also, although in the long run, with the conversion, I will be disabling the cargo light and adding my own LED lights, for now it is needed to have light on in the back while I am working on the conversion. But opening the doors was the only way Ford provided me to turn that cargo light on and off (though annoyingly on a timer that made the light go off after ten minutes of the door being open so that I had to close and then reopen a door every ten minutes). Now that I disabled the door switches, I can't turn it on and off by opening and closing the doors. If I want to use the light, I'll have to turn the key to the on position then off again every minute (the light stays on for a minute that way), or wire a switch into the ground wire that I installed going to the control module behind the glove box (still, every time I flip the switch, that will give me only about 10 minutes and then the timer makes the light go off), or wire the light directly to the drive battery (I don't have a coach battery yet).
Here is my new rendering of FORD:
Fail On Research and Design
Drives nice though.
Now if I could just figure out how to disable the feature which makes the doors automatically lock after being closed for a minute.... Since the module now always thinks the doors are shut, that feature is likely to be even more of a pain in the ass. (Did I mention I do not like excessive, pointless, overcomplicating automation?)
Also, although in the long run, with the conversion, I will be disabling the cargo light and adding my own LED lights, for now it is needed to have light on in the back while I am working on the conversion. But opening the doors was the only way Ford provided me to turn that cargo light on and off (though annoyingly on a timer that made the light go off after ten minutes of the door being open so that I had to close and then reopen a door every ten minutes). Now that I disabled the door switches, I can't turn it on and off by opening and closing the doors. If I want to use the light, I'll have to turn the key to the on position then off again every minute (the light stays on for a minute that way), or wire a switch into the ground wire that I installed going to the control module behind the glove box (still, every time I flip the switch, that will give me only about 10 minutes and then the timer makes the light go off), or wire the light directly to the drive battery (I don't have a coach battery yet).
Here is my new rendering of FORD:
Fail On Research and Design
Drives nice though.