This problem seems to happen more and more, and there is like NO info anywhere.
The old Peugeot/citroen 1.9 idi diesel (aka xud etc) is an excellent engine and a lot of people like it. Its popular in the motorhome community And also in the veg oil community.
Unfortunately it has THE stupidest immo ever. Do you know the system im talking about?
The immo system has a antenna around the barrel (or sometimes a keypad!) and a small immo box. The second part of the immo is under an armored tamper-proof shield on the fuel pump. Its fixed on with single-use bolts so you cannot unscrew them.
So these engines are now 25+ years old (?) and of course keys get lost, etc.
The traditional way to deal with this is to physically cut off the tamper-proof steel cover, or various methods to unscrew the tamper-proof bolts etc. then you can remove the immo totally and just feed 12v to the fuel valve and everything is ok.
BUT thats a huge pain in the ass. Its ok if the pump is not on the engine, but in real life, when the pump is on the engine, the engine is in a big Ducato motor-home, the Ducato is stuck somehere and cannot move because of immo problem, and its usually raining? its very time-consuming and awkward to do.
I was thinking, with the millions of XUD engines out there (they were very popular for a long time!)'there MUST be a software solution?
Does anybody know how this system works?
If i went to a Citroen dealer in 1998 and said hi i have this car but i lost the key, how did they program a new key?
There seems to be no obd at all, how did they even access the system?
The immo box has a eeprom, but the usual software for making xponder dump from immo dumps and things doesnt recognoze the dump.
Of course the ultimate solution would be a immo-off.
How did people deal with this back in the 1990s and 2000s?
If you have one of these cars and lost the keys, what do you do (apart from cut off the immo cover?)
NOBODY seems to know!
Maybe somebody here knows.