How confident are you that all ECU's/Dealers/Tunes are the same or at least similar enough that the above always applies?BFT - John wrote:This is the CVN number which is stored in the serial eeprom of the ECU. If you write whether it be a stock file or modified, it will change the CVN number.
This number is what the dealership computer can see. You do not need to download the IROM (where the maps are stored) and compare against ori to see this. All they can see is the original file or 'a' modified file has been tuned.
Any software update will overwrite the ecu information and lose the map so to speak.
BMW have been able to spot an ECU remap by OBD, or BDM/Tricore mode since 2009 (Possibly earlier).
I agree it has to be spotted to be voided, but modern day things have changed. Doesn't mean there is a way around them, however once a TD1 stamp is on the car, it cannot be removed.
Well agree to disagree but willing to wager highly on it!W8PMC wrote:Likewise.
My experiences differ somewhat & perhaps a proportion of that has been luck, however i've been told by several sources that 'some' tunes are easily detectable, especially simple flash remaps where as you say these can be detected easily from a pure flash count, however bench modified ECU's where only certain lines of code are amended (i can't explain the exact process) would need significant investigation to find the changes both with the tune present & with those altered lines of code being returned to stock. This investigation would be at a far higher level than a UK dealer.