Well, it didn't work! the hydractive changed to and got stuck in hard mode after the usual half mile of nice soft ride. So I reconnected the speed sensor and then disconnected the body movement sensor - same effect - ran fine in soft mode for the first half mile then hard mode. So it's not that either.. Next suspect will be either the steering sensor or the throttle movement sensor. I think these are both harder to reach so a project ensues. The body movement sensor was soaked due to the LHM leak from the steering pinion valve leaking on to it and I wondered if this was affecting it but not (oil isn't a conductor anyway so unlikely to short it out). How do you reach the steering sensor? Is this located in the steering column housing or further down the column in the dashboard? Also, is the accelerator pedal sensor ok for access? I have not yet had a look at these and it would be nice to go in pre armed!
New problems!!!!
First of all I fitted new brake pads to the front today - nice and cheap from AEP in Rutherglen. Positively the brake caliper pistons both retracted easily so that's a success (the first with this car) and the new pads fitted. I found that the bad parking brake was not caused by the wafer-thin brake pads but by the detached brake cable

this is the same as on my previous blue XM. Seems that if the cables are lacking in their full tension when released, the end can pop out at the balancer end.
Well, the end that would be the 'balancer end' if XMs had a brake balancer! I mean the lever mechanism. Anyway it was a case of re-locating it under the car while I was replacing the brake pads.
I had a look at the leaking steering pinion valve finally.
Wish I hadn't! It does appear to be leaking from the highest point on the thing: you know, the shaft seal..... I'd been kind of hoping it was one of the pipe connections needing nipped up which was exactly all the Blue XM needed when it leaked here.

Not sure if it's clear in the picture but this revealed the LHM is oozing out above the pipe unions and the only exit for LHM above this level is from the actual rotary seal of the valve's shaft. This, of course means replacement...... there's just no other option. And I'll say, this pinion valv looks a thorough **** to remove. I'm half wondering if this -due to the totally inaccessible look of it- is beyond my garage skills and facilities. Anyone done a pinion valve change on a 2L turbo??
Positives again! I have a new throttle position sensor on order so here's hoping that helps with the terrible response to the accelerator.
And have a new exhaust back box on order too to replace the box of rot the car presently has. The pipe between the middle box and the back box has broken off the back box and that's gone and caused the middle pipe to hang down, the catalysor is hitting the side and the back box has swung round to chat to the rar suspension sphere. Lots of rattling and blown exhaust excitement. Except it's not exciting..
I notice the engine management chack light doesn't light up with the ignionion. I think this is meant to light up upon ignition before the engine is started. It's odd this isn't lit at all as the recent history of this car shows the 'EML light on' in a garage report. And lookiung at the edge of the lower dashboard console, someone has been in at the bulbs here (little signs of an implement used to prise off the snap-on edge) - strange they missed the EML light bulb to replace. Of course these could have been worked on years before the EML light came on in the last few years....
Anyway. nice new brakes and parking brake.
O no! another problem?
Yes, it seems like the hydraulic pump is on the way out... it is making a terrible noise when it comes under load just before the pressure regulator cuts out. I tightened the tension to no avail - noisy and the steering is half assisted and 'notchy' at idle. I know this as a symptom of HP pump using less than 5 of its pistons from my BX days. I noticed the HP pum suction hose from the LHM tank was a rubbish fit at the pump end down to the original Citroen pipe clips getting tired. I snipped them off and replaced with a jubilee clip that now holds the pipe tight to the HP pump inlet. Previously it could be twisted loosely by hand - not ideal. The LHM tank end was the same - loose to it got the same treatment. Then 10 minutes of running the engine with the pressure regulator 12mm release bolt slackend and tightened on and off to try and purge any air sucked un by the crappy pipe connections. Trouble is that even after that the HP pump still sounds terrible and the steering is still notchy varying with revs so I think the pump itself is dying.
Then !! I found two spare BX HP pumps and noted they appear to be the same structure as the XM pump, same fixings, pulley looks the same size and offset - only the LHM pipe connection is about 90 degrees out but it still looks like the pipe will connect to it ok. Oh, and the BX pump is green like all LHM parts used to be. So in the next installment I'll be fitting the BX pump in place at least to test if it helps.
As an aside, my 1983 CX 20 Pallas passed its MOT first time! One advisory on a CV gaitor but that was all - this XM would FAIL a test in an instant
