Repair ABS sensor harness?

timsch

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2009
Location
Brookside Village, Texas
TDI
2003 Mk4 Jetta (blue), 2003 Mk4 Jetta (black), 2011 Mk6 Jetta, all manuals
Anyone had success splicing in wire to repair a buggared ABS sensor harness? My son didn't clip the harness back into the retainers on the struts after the last job and it got abraded by the wheel apparently. It's in a pretty harsh location.

 

Nuje

Top Post Dawg
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Location
Island near Vancouver
TDI
2015 Sportwagen; Golf GLS 2002 (swap from 2L gas); 2016 A3 e-tron
I'd go to a scrap yard, find an intact wire and cut it near the body so you have much length as possible, and a fully intact bend between those two retaining nubs.

Then, cut your existing wire in roughly the same place and splice in (waterproof heat-shrink butt connectors) the one you cut off the scrap car.
Wrap your splice in wiring harness tape and maybe some heat-shrink tubing as well.
 

compu_85

Gadget Guy
Joined
Sep 29, 2003
Location
La Conner, WA
TDI
... None :S
Is the wire broken? If not, i'd goop it with liquid electrical tape and keep driving.

I'd also price out a new sensor. What car is this on? They generally aren't expensive.

-J
 

timsch

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2009
Location
Brookside Village, Texas
TDI
2003 Mk4 Jetta (blue), 2003 Mk4 Jetta (black), 2011 Mk6 Jetta, all manuals
Mk4 Jetta. Wire's not totally broken. Maybe half of the strands left on the worst wire if I'm lucky. I separated them as well as I could and wrapped some pieces of tape around each exposed section of wire, then wrapped the whole bundle in electrical tape. I'll wrap this again with some self adhesive silicone tape since I know the electrical tape itself won't last.

Another less abraded section I gooped some gasket maker i have that doesn't seem to get hard around the missing wire insulation and then sealed any gaps in the outer sheath with E6000 adhesive - basically stuff i have around the garage.. I've never heard of of liquid electrical tape, but that seems more proper than what I did.

Harness was ~$130 new, so I'll hold off on replacing it for now. I posted a WTB, so maybe I'll get lucky with someone parting out one of these.
 

ts888

Veteran Member
Joined
Feb 18, 2023
Location
PNW US
TDI
03 ALH
Is this sensor side or harness side? I think idParts sells harness side repair connectors.
 

timsch

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2009
Location
Brookside Village, Texas
TDI
2003 Mk4 Jetta (blue), 2003 Mk4 Jetta (black), 2011 Mk6 Jetta, all manuals
Damage is at the section where it is held @ the strut. Picture at top shows the two snap-in pieces on the harness.
 

Nuje

Top Post Dawg
Joined
Feb 11, 2005
Location
Island near Vancouver
TDI
2015 Sportwagen; Golf GLS 2002 (swap from 2L gas); 2016 A3 e-tron
Definitely worth a try going with the "patch what you got left and see if that works" approach.

I don't know (read: understand) exactly how the ABS sensors work, but there are some systems on the car (e.g. airbags) where the controller is sending a signal and expecting back a certain resistance; and if it doesn't get that resistance - it shuts down the system and throws up the error light. Airbags will often fail with a "resistance too high" error just due to minor corrosion or the like on a terminal. If the ABS system is like that, having half of the wire's strands missing in one spot would probably light up the error light.
 

timsch

Veteran Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2009
Location
Brookside Village, Texas
TDI
2003 Mk4 Jetta (blue), 2003 Mk4 Jetta (black), 2011 Mk6 Jetta, all manuals
True enough, Nuje. It was easy enough to try. I'll find out this week whether it was effective or not. I figure it's a short-term solution one way or the other.
 

Zak99b5

Veteran Member
Joined
Apr 30, 2021
Location
Albany NY
TDI
2003 Jetta TDI
Wheel speed sensor is basically an oddly-shaped guitar pickup. It creates a (very small) voltage as the tone ring passes by it (instead of a vibrating steel string). The Hz of that voltage is dependent on wheel speed, so that is what the abs controller is looking for and using.

The voltage is super weak, so it doesn’t require much wire to carry it; however, any poor connection will cause it to drop out. So if it’s still working, I’d not go looking to splice anything. Just insulate and protect it as well as possible and motor on.
 
Top