Need help diagnosing an intermittent shutdown/no-start on my 2002 E46 M3, ~182k miles.
I’ve now had two highway failures, but the second one gave much better data, so I’m focusing on that.
### Second failure:
- Engine shut off suddenly while driving
- Tach dropped to zero
- Speedometer dropped to zero (not 100% sure about this one)
- Other gauges still worked
- Climate control stayed on
- Car would crank normally, but would not start
Clue:
Right after the failure, my Foxwell NT510 could still communicate with other modules, but could not communicate with the DME at all for about 30–45 minutes. Later the DME came back.
Other notes:
- Both failures happened approximately one hour into a highway drive
- Dyno tuning session w/four or five flashes two weeks prior
- Battery was reading 12.3 V
- Charging voltage was reading 14.1 V
- I’ve already replaced the blue DME relay and ignition switch speculating it was a DME power issue
- E-box relay/fuse area does not show obvious heat damage or corrosion
My current thinking:
This seems less like a whole-car power failure and more like the DME itself or its power/ground/feed path dropping offline temporarily, since:
- Climate control stayed on
- other modules remained reachable with code reader
- DME became unreachable
Questions:
- What are the common causes of temporary DME dropout?
- What DME power supply fuses, grounds, or E-box connections should I target first?
- Has anyone seen an MSS54 go offline for 30–45 minutes and then recover, especially after about an hour of highway driving?
Appreciate any insight.
I’ve now had two highway failures, but the second one gave much better data, so I’m focusing on that.
### Second failure:
- Engine shut off suddenly while driving
- Tach dropped to zero
- Speedometer dropped to zero (not 100% sure about this one)
- Other gauges still worked
- Climate control stayed on
- Car would crank normally, but would not start
Clue:
Right after the failure, my Foxwell NT510 could still communicate with other modules, but could not communicate with the DME at all for about 30–45 minutes. Later the DME came back.
Other notes:
- Both failures happened approximately one hour into a highway drive
- Dyno tuning session w/four or five flashes two weeks prior
- Battery was reading 12.3 V
- Charging voltage was reading 14.1 V
- I’ve already replaced the blue DME relay and ignition switch speculating it was a DME power issue
- E-box relay/fuse area does not show obvious heat damage or corrosion
My current thinking:
This seems less like a whole-car power failure and more like the DME itself or its power/ground/feed path dropping offline temporarily, since:
- Climate control stayed on
- other modules remained reachable with code reader
- DME became unreachable
Questions:
- What are the common causes of temporary DME dropout?
- What DME power supply fuses, grounds, or E-box connections should I target first?
- Has anyone seen an MSS54 go offline for 30–45 minutes and then recover, especially after about an hour of highway driving?
Appreciate any insight.

I could see over prolonged mileage/time then maybe the lack of one comes into play.
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