robertmnorton wrote:Have you considered the cause of the failure ? Old age or an external component, ie pump ?
robertm
I have Robert and came to the conclusion that it may have been used on a Xantia. It's an oddity that the Xantia S2 cruise ECU is slightly differently wired in that the vacuum pump motor control and the vacuum control electrovalve are wired opposite; the pump is on pin 7 on the XM and Pin 6 in the Xantia whilst the vacuum electrovalve is on pin 6 on the XM and 7 on the Xantia.
The pump takes a highish current and is driven by a BD535 power transistor. The vacuum electrovalve is a low current device and is therefore driven by a pair of little BC337 transistors. these were short-circuit, as was the 24v zener across the pump supply. the BD535 was tested OK but I swapped it as a precaution.
So, I think the vacuum electrovalve circuit tried to drive the pump and that took out the BC337s and the pump circuit trying to drive the vacuum electrovalve caused a big enough spike of back-emf from it to pop the zener...
So the moral of this tale is if you think an S2 Xantia has a duff cruise ECU don't try substituting an XM one. A quirk is that an S1 Xantia uses the same cruise ECU as the XM

I can't explain that one either!