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#21
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You can open up the key by taking an X-Acto knife and cutting along the valley separating the two halves of the key. Go slow and cut away a little at a time until it splits apart. I did this job with my E39 M5 key and replaced the battery with a non-rechargeable one. Big no-no in the eyes of many, but I had no issues of a battery exploding and it worked fine for the 1.5 years I had the M5.
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#22
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Well I had to find out if this job was as easy as I would like - I bought the car from the second owner and he didn't tell me quite a few things about it when we exchanged the registration papers; so I have one key that works perfectly (I don't know then if it is the 'Number 1' key or supplementary when you re-program it from iside the car), and another that will start the car, meaning that the induction circuit is Ok, but the remote door lock never worked.
So I carefully split this one open to check if it had a battery that didn't take a charge, since it hadn't been used for a year or two, annnndd... 3.0 Volts exactly. So if the battery is good, and the induction circuit is good, does that mean that only the central locking transmitter is fried??
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---------------------------------------------------------------- 2006 X5 4.8iS (facelift) in Imolarot + Ivory leather & alcantara headliner 1999 E46 323i in Imolarot II + Grey nappa 1990 E30 320iSE Sterlingsilber |
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