Here where I’m landing on this:
Observation — EKP Module and Fuel Pump Relationship on High Mileage E46 M3’s
Two cars offered an interesting pattern worth sharing.
A few years ago, on my 2005 with 162k miles, I installed a new EKP module to address a fail-to-start on first crank and a fuel pump relay code. About a week later the original high mileage fuel pump failed. I didn’t even record them as separate events in my maintenance log.
On the 2002 with 182k miles, I installed a new OEM fuel pump, filter, and regulator ahead of a dyno session (to refine a base performance tune we’d been running for a bout a year). One week later the original EKP module failed (thermally) on the highway. Then failed again a second time after some misguided attempts to address a DME power supply issue I thought I was having.
It’s plausible that in both cases the new component — performing as designed — placed greater electrical demand on an aged partner than that partner had been experiencing. The degraded component simply couldn’t meet it.
I can’t prove it from two data points. But the pattern across both of my cars suggests that on high mileage examples these two components may be worth replacing together when either one shows signs of age or fault codes.
Curious whether others have observed something similar.
Observation — EKP Module and Fuel Pump Relationship on High Mileage E46 M3’s
Two cars offered an interesting pattern worth sharing.
A few years ago, on my 2005 with 162k miles, I installed a new EKP module to address a fail-to-start on first crank and a fuel pump relay code. About a week later the original high mileage fuel pump failed. I didn’t even record them as separate events in my maintenance log.
On the 2002 with 182k miles, I installed a new OEM fuel pump, filter, and regulator ahead of a dyno session (to refine a base performance tune we’d been running for a bout a year). One week later the original EKP module failed (thermally) on the highway. Then failed again a second time after some misguided attempts to address a DME power supply issue I thought I was having.
It’s plausible that in both cases the new component — performing as designed — placed greater electrical demand on an aged partner than that partner had been experiencing. The degraded component simply couldn’t meet it.
I can’t prove it from two data points. But the pattern across both of my cars suggests that on high mileage examples these two components may be worth replacing together when either one shows signs of age or fault codes.
Curious whether others have observed something similar.

Comment