We recently upgraded our tow car from a 2006/2007 gen 1 Kia Sorento to a 2020 Peugeot 508SW 2.0 bHDI EAT8.
We got the car from a local Peugeout dealer with extended warranty and I specifically insisted on the dealer installing a towbar to avoid potential finger-pointing and void of said warranty if something went wrong.
The latter took three months and proved a huge mistake. It was either their first time installing a towbar or they have huge communication issues.
I somehow found out they included the correct OEM electric kit for my vehicle (Peugeot #1688059780), but when I hooked the car to our Dethleffs van, I got a cryptic error message 'Trailer connection error. Repair needed.
I've pulled the same van with 4 different vehicles last year and none of them reported any errors, so I assumed the dealership did a lousy job and took the car back to them. They did a 'test' with a DIY set of car lights hooked to a 7-pin connector (although my van and the car are equipped with a 13-pin Jaeger) and said nothing is wrong on the vehicle side. They were not willing to share any documentation for the cable kit that could help me trace the fault, so armed with all the knowledge I've acquired while reading caravanchronicles.com, I spent two evenings replacing the caravan's 13-pin connector and testing each wire until I found a short in one of the side lights that was obviously making the car nervous and making it shut down the whole left side of the caravan (pin 5).
It appears that french cars are way too sensitive to short circuits in german caravans.
Also, I don't like the design of this side light. Even after replacing both connectors the risk is to high for a shortage here, and I'll need to re-address it. Times six.
I'm having mixed feelings here, part of me is amazed that my car can now sense the resistance on a pin and shut it down automatically while notifying the driver, and another part is pissed off by the lack of proper documentation and the bad experience at the dealership.
We got the car from a local Peugeout dealer with extended warranty and I specifically insisted on the dealer installing a towbar to avoid potential finger-pointing and void of said warranty if something went wrong.
The latter took three months and proved a huge mistake. It was either their first time installing a towbar or they have huge communication issues.
I somehow found out they included the correct OEM electric kit for my vehicle (Peugeot #1688059780), but when I hooked the car to our Dethleffs van, I got a cryptic error message 'Trailer connection error. Repair needed.
I've pulled the same van with 4 different vehicles last year and none of them reported any errors, so I assumed the dealership did a lousy job and took the car back to them. They did a 'test' with a DIY set of car lights hooked to a 7-pin connector (although my van and the car are equipped with a 13-pin Jaeger) and said nothing is wrong on the vehicle side. They were not willing to share any documentation for the cable kit that could help me trace the fault, so armed with all the knowledge I've acquired while reading caravanchronicles.com, I spent two evenings replacing the caravan's 13-pin connector and testing each wire until I found a short in one of the side lights that was obviously making the car nervous and making it shut down the whole left side of the caravan (pin 5).
It appears that french cars are way too sensitive to short circuits in german caravans.
Also, I don't like the design of this side light. Even after replacing both connectors the risk is to high for a shortage here, and I'll need to re-address it. Times six.
I'm having mixed feelings here, part of me is amazed that my car can now sense the resistance on a pin and shut it down automatically while notifying the driver, and another part is pissed off by the lack of proper documentation and the bad experience at the dealership.