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Converting an MSS54/HP into an MSS54HP CSL (H-bridge)

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  • nextelbuddy
    replied
    Originally posted by t3ddftw View Post
    I have a dumb question: I assume I can solder on the H-Bridge and Capacitors but not convert to the CSL software, right? I plan on using it on a car with a stock airbox for now, but later on I will get a carbon airbox, flap and the rest of the bits and bobs.
    Yes that should be fine.


    heinzboehmer

    i have a question. in the original directions it says

    "Also the onboard pressure sensor is different. You can either install one with the same specs as the MSS54HPs (MPXA6115A or MPXAZ6115A), or you can change the pressure scale (at 0xC476, change "D3 1C 12" to "C2 5F 03"). Sorry, forgot to mention that in the emails to you NZ

    i was able to do this no problem in the CSL Partial file (211323000401-PD31).

    when i try to do this in a HP NON CSL tune file (211323002701-J469). searching for 0xC476 gives me nothing but FFFFF section.


    What are we supposed to do if we convert an non HP to HP DME but dont want to run it as CSL but just a normal HP DME. how can we change the onboard BAR sensor scaling? is there another address for the non CSL files?

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  • t3ddftw
    replied
    I have a dumb question: I assume I can solder on the H-Bridge and Capacitors but not convert to the CSL software, right? I plan on using it on a car with a stock airbox for now, but later on I will get a carbon airbox, flap and the rest of the bits and bobs.

    Leave a comment:


  • heinzboehmer
    replied
    Originally posted by nextelbuddy View Post
    How do you split the file in half to flash evenly to master and slave. Is there another software we need that splits a file evenly?
    Any hex editor should make this easy. Open the file, delete half, save, repeat for the other half.

    Leave a comment:


  • sapote
    replied
    Originally posted by Anders93 View Post
    I used a similar technique. I found it helpful to use copper solder wick to remove as much solder from the pads before applying pressure to "lift" the legs. Then, as you did, use tweezers to apply gentle upward pressure while applying heat to the pad. After wicking, there is so little solder left over that some of the legs lifted even without heat (although I would not recommend doing this as you could easily rip out a pad).
    To remove an IC that you don't need it any more, here how do: Just heat the pad with solder iron to liquify the solder, then use the tip of the Exactor knife (on the other hand) to lift the pin away (iron in RH and Exactor in LH, I started from the right most pin, then just continue to the left pin lifting it 45 deg diagonal up). In fact, adding more solder to the pins makes it easy to liquify the solder as more solder help conduct more heat from the iron tip. Once the IC is removed, use solder wick to clean up the excess solder from the pads.

    Originally posted by Anders93 View Post
    If you have a bevel tip on your soldering iron, you can put some flux paste on the legs, melt a little solder on the tip, and without lifting the iron up, sweep down the row of legs in one motion. The flux paste helps prevent bridging the pins. This is, of course, after soldering the corners to hold the chip in place. This video shows the technique: https://youtu.be/5uiroWBkdFY?t=115
    The best way to solder a surface mounted IC is to use a concave tip: The concave surface helps to hold extra solder in it, then you just "brush" the tip over the pins as you drag the tip along a row of pins. Just like painting and one stroke end to end finished the whole row of pins, as in this video (I had done on very high density pin microprocessors and not just this simple DIP package):
    https://www.instructables.com/How-to...-the-easy-way/
    Edited: I didn't know the bevel tip in the original post is the same as my "concave tip", and the original video is even better than the one I posted. Sorry.

    Last edited by sapote; 01-27-2022, 10:27 PM.

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  • nextelbuddy
    replied
    How do you split the file in half to flash evenly to master and slave. Is there another software we need that splits a file evenly?


    Also I'm wondering if we use the 400BB chips harvested from MS43 DMEs, solder them in place. Maybe it's possible to flash via obd out of the gate since they already have software written to them?


    I have a spare mss54 DME I want to convert to HP so I can make a copy of my current HP DME for my turbo car and have a spare back up DME to have on hand. I don't plan on running CSL software on it at all.


    If that's the case Im guessing that I need to determine the program and software version of my current HP DME and find the associated OPA file for the program and then convert my BIn file for my tune portion to an ODA as well? Or what would be the best way to go about that?

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  • t3ddftw
    replied
    Originally posted by Schiffi View Post
    One short question, at the moment i try to modify a non HP to HP ecu. I thougt i ordered two AM29F400BB-50SE but today two AM29F400BT-50SE have been delivered. Does this make a difference?
    Per the D/S:

    B = Boot sector in the bottom
    T = Boot sector in the top

    I am working on restoring an old DME that I have on hand for my future S54 swap -- this DME has a bad flash IC (I think it's the slave, but I can't recall).

    Anyways, I wanted to let you guys know that Arrow Electronics has plenty in stock: https://www.arrow.com/en/products/am...-semiconductor

    Always better to buy these things from a distributor.

    The only downside of course is that it's not an extended temperature part, but up to 85C should be fine, IMO.

    -Ted
    Last edited by t3ddftw; 01-18-2022, 08:14 AM.

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  • S54B32
    replied
    Yes, the have Bootloader section in the wrong place. you need AM29F400BB

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  • Schiffi
    replied
    One short question, at the moment i try to modify a non HP to HP ecu. I thougt i ordered two AM29F400BB-50SE but today two AM29F400BT-50SE have been delivered. Does this make a difference?

    Leave a comment:


  • davke
    replied
    Thanks for info!

    Leave a comment:


  • SliM3
    replied
    Originally posted by davke View Post
    Hi. I am going to convert mss54 to mss54hp. No h-bridge, just for map sensor really. Is BDM flashing necessary? Or can i flash via obd with msstuner?
    You can do it with a BDM only but chances are you’ll need to the throw those -400 chips on a chip reader to verify they’re good to go prior to soldering them onto the board.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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  • S54B32
    replied
    You need bdm or EEPROM flasher. There is no other way, because with empty flash chips the dme can not boot so no obd is possible.

    Leave a comment:


  • davke
    replied
    Hi. I am going to convert mss54 to mss54hp. No h-bridge, just for map sensor really. Is BDM flashing necessary? Or can i flash via obd with msstuner?

    Leave a comment:


  • skristedja
    replied
    Originally posted by nextelbuddy View Post
    I’m not using Paffy or Terra’s bin. This is a full csl bin. No converted bootsector.

    edit: it does connect via inpa now. Still not working great with my scanner though. Maybe it’s just the usual csl-obd communication issues?
    Last edited by skristedja; 05-27-2021, 05:44 AM.

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  • nextelbuddy
    replied
    Originally posted by skristedja View Post
    So I recently installed my box with my MSS54-hp conversion and I'm having some trouble reading codes and connecting to the DME through OBD. For whatever reason, it works with Martyn's DME utility but not through my OBD scanner or INPA. I BDM'd the software (211325000401-PD11) onto the chips and flashed my HTE tune (also modified with Martyn's binary modification tool) on my bench harness. I did not do anything with winkfp. Car runs really good, I just want to be able to read codes and log from the DME. Any ideas?
    That's covered in this thread

    The CSL binaries Paffy has on the MSSFlasher website do not have all the changes necessary to play 100% nice with the non-CSL bootloader. It mostly works, but notably the ability to read error codes is broken Download a corrected program here (https://nam3forum.com/forums/filedata/fetch?id=12984) Flash only the program -

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  • skristedja
    replied
    So I recently installed my box with my MSS54-hp conversion and I'm having some trouble reading codes and connecting to the DME through OBD. For whatever reason, it works with Martyn's DME utility but not through my OBD scanner or INPA. I BDM'd the software (211325000401-PD11) onto the chips and flashed my HTE tune (also modified with Martyn's binary modification tool) on my bench harness. I did not do anything with winkfp. Car runs really good, I just want to be able to read codes and log from the DME. Any ideas?

    Leave a comment:

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