Eberspacher D1LC servicing

SquirrellCook

Forum Member
I have been very naughty and not looked my air eberspacher at all since installing it around 12 years ago.
I have noticed it shutting down early sometimes for the last couple of years.
So the decision was made to service it, and I thought I’d share it with all six of you. ;)
Planning ahead I purchased a service kit and a new glow plug from Mellors.

Removed and on the bench.

C0E1B6F1-F561-4E26-B952-D9F44B339A9B.jpeg

First remove the outlet nozzle. It held on by four protrusions and can be a fight to remove without splitting it.

EB727F21-A6DA-44FB-91AA-B0D821307D71.jpeg

Next remove the electrical housing.

96725994-3563-41A9-AE91-A068036DE28F.jpeg

Disconnect the glow plug using a 7mm spanner. Also remove the wiring loom from the ECU. A little clip on the side holds it in place.
Remove the little plastic rivets from the housing. If you break them the kit has spares.

B743D8BF-53CB-4AFC-8A0B-F47282F7E16C.jpeg

Remove the remaining plugs from the ECU and remove the ECU.

E7FD4E00-4636-428F-A990-9BB33BA36745.jpeg


Undo the four M5 screws and separate the fan unit from the burner.

7B8D7FD5-3CE9-4CC3-89FF-438755E32EAF.jpeg


Remove the two screws to expose the burner.

FA22FD7E-7FBD-4FDC-88A9-7BF9C5A853C4.jpeg


You can see why you need to have the gaskets and seal handy.

Remove the glow plug and the screen. The screen may put a fight up and get destroyed.

F5B196AF-AD42-4F27-90C9-19CE9FCD63EE.jpeg
B6FF7E55-4795-4640-82B0-0D1B9F231D1C.jpeg
426EDFE4-5628-438D-B2EE-F433EF0511A5.jpeg


This is where you could do with a ultrasonic cleaner. I used solvents and followed with glass bead blasting once dry. Then throughly washed it in hot water to remove any traces of beads.


58ED6AFD-6F1F-4672-BBDC-72636DF8C80F.jpeg


A new gasket and felt seal fitted.

5AE38747-7060-49C0-8BA7-C5FFCEC71229.jpeg


Assemble the two halves with a new gasket. I kept the support for the gasket in place until the halves were together, then removed the excess.

39ED729C-2E26-4462-B543-2F6286B42A15.jpeg


Sensors refilled and getting closer.

53E5A3A2-B253-4A46-A685-02EF155115BE.jpeg


Assemble the covers using the new rivets having made sure all the connections have been made.
Finish off by fitting the electrical cover and end piece.

C6D07EDF-D802-434C-9246-2B4D4A356674.jpeg


If all has gone well you can reinstall it and give it a test firing. Don’t expect it to work perfectly first time, it may need a couple of stops and starts before it settles down.

CE4F0307-CAA3-4A2B-A895-F28677B2C9B0.jpeg
 

wildebus

Forum Member
Interesting stuff.
the first chinese heater I bought never worked properly and I think if I followed your guide I might be able to fix it :)
As Arnie says ..... I'll be back (y)
 

mistericeman

Forum Member
As ever....

My bible as far as eberspacher stuff is concerned

 

Bouydog

Forum Member
As ever....

My bible as far as eberspacher stuff is concerned

Without this site I would not have been able to rewire mine after cutting all the original wiring out leaving a gap of a year before returning to it with a blank memory.
Lesson, document everything 😁
 

Bouydog

Forum Member
A good Squirrel guide, I will tackle this at some point.
I also need to silence my air intake that draws air from inside, without measuring I would say it’s around 100mm pipe and sounds like a jet readying for take off on startup and shutdown.
 

SquirrellCook

Forum Member
In Murky I wanted to circulate the air as much as possible. The original build had an eberspacher, but it had been removed by the time I got it. What was left behind the drivers seat was a little dog kennel. I mounted this just behind the front drivers wheel arch and put a foam filter inside it. This is the my setup air intake, you may have noticed the eberspacher is in the redundant drivers step. Being so far away from the habitation area helps with the noise. You get a low howl from the outlets still.
 
Last edited:

Bouydog

Forum Member
Yes I think moving the intake to the front and a foam silencer would help, currently located in habitation entrance steps so fairly central. I will add it to my list of revisions (first timer build errors) The erberspacher itself is in an external locker like betty so we hardly hear that.
 

SquirrellCook

Forum Member
Well I have to admit to my lack of success. The naughty heater is still turning itself off! I checked my wiring diagrams and I do have a diagnostic wire. My controller has a diagnostic function. My wiring loom does not have a spare wire :( The original controller was volvo and did not have the diagnostic function. So back to stone age testing. I've been trying to get it to run continuously at lower and lower temperatures. Finally today I succeeded. I hope this proves it's a faulty over temp sensor. New one ordered. I might when I go to fit it try and pull another wire through the loom for the diagnostic function to work.
 

Users who viewed this discussion (Total:0)

Top