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orthopod



Member Since: 01 Oct 2020
Location: Braselton, ga
Posts: 6

United States 2011 Range Rover Supercharged 5.0 SC V8 Zermatt Silver
2011 Sc: Gearbox fault, hdc not available, adaptive dynamics

I have a 2011 supercharged with 114,000 miles. Occasionally when I start it up and either go into reverse or drive the car will give me a 3 errors: Gearbox fault, HDC not available, And adaptive dynamics fault.
The car will drive in limp mode...if I shift back to park, I cannot
Reshift the is locked.
If I turn the car off, I can reshift, and the error is not
Always reproducible. I find that if I let the car warm up, and the Rpms Combe down, and shift quickly, the error rarely occurs.
When the car drive, it shifts fine, never has an error...only when choosing from reverse or
Drive.
The code I get is: p0850
Attached are pics

Range Rover dealer wants 9500 to replace the transmission. To me I’ve alway thought this was an issue with a switch, based on the way it reacts...

Batteries have been replaced, and car has correct voltages and battery is charging properly

I don’t want to drop almost 10 thousand USD to fix this...
I know rrphil has retired, but anyone know
If he takes side consulting jobs?? If I can get someone to help me get this fixed, I’ll generously donate!!

Any advice?






Post #568560 2nd Oct 2020 12:22am
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orthopod



Member Since: 01 Oct 2020
Location: Braselton, ga
Posts: 6

United States 2011 Range Rover Supercharged 5.0 SC V8 Zermatt Silver

I think it is acting like a neutral sensor switch, but may be mechatronic unit, but the tranny shifts perfectly as
Long as initially it doesn’t get the fault code, and if it does it’s easy to reset but turning the car off and reshifting.

Wish I could find a good range transmission shop here in the Us (there is a shop in California the has a lot of experience wit these).

In in the Atlanta area, and everyone wants to replace the whole
Transmission

Post #568563 2nd Oct 2020 12:55am
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GraemeS



Member Since: 06 Mar 2015
Location: Wagga area
Posts: 2469

Australia 2012 Range Rover Autobiography TDV8 Bournville

Maybe the gearbox shift cable is out of adjustment. Can the fault be triggered by moving the shift lever backwards or forwards a little?

Post #568568 2nd Oct 2020 4:41am
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orthopod



Member Since: 01 Oct 2020
Location: Braselton, ga
Posts: 6

United States 2011 Range Rover Supercharged 5.0 SC V8 Zermatt Silver

No..it requires a full shift

Post #568569 2nd Oct 2020 6:50am
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GraemeS



Member Since: 06 Mar 2015
Location: Wagga area
Posts: 2469

Australia 2012 Range Rover Autobiography TDV8 Bournville

There should also be fault codes stored for the adaptive dynamics and HDC faults. If your tool can't find them then you may need access to a LR-specific diagnostic tool.
Is the first fault message always the same fault? That might provide a clue to the fault as the others are likely only due to the primary one.

Post #568570 2nd Oct 2020 7:20am
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orthopod



Member Since: 01 Oct 2020
Location: Braselton, ga
Posts: 6

United States 2011 Range Rover Supercharged 5.0 SC V8 Zermatt Silver

Specific fault codes stored are:


P0915-01 and P1706-9a


I think HDC and adaptive dynamics auto when the gearbox faults...

Seems like a switch issue, wire
Issue, or mechatronic issue

Post #568646 2nd Oct 2020 5:26pm
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northernmonkeyjones



Member Since: 24 Mar 2012
Location: derby
Posts: 8500

United Kingdom 2016 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Santorini Black

If it’s a shifter issue then do a bit of Lubrication on the shifter Bowden cable.

It’s the same gearbox as on the 3.6, which suffered from a sticky cable....

Worth a try and costs nothing.... There is nothing that can't be fixed with a hammer😜😜
FFRR 4.4 SDV8 Autobiography Santorini Black.
Fiat 500x 1.4 multiair Lounge 2015
2010 LR D4 Commercial 2.7 TDV6

Post #568652 2nd Oct 2020 5:52pm
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Kuret



Member Since: 07 Feb 2024
Location: Ontario
Posts: 9

Canada 2011 Range Rover Supercharged 5.0 SC V8 Barolo Black

Did you get this solved? Did you end up replacing the transmission? I have the same fault issue happening intermittently.

Post #703524 31st Oct 2024 8:01pm
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Kuret



Member Since: 07 Feb 2024
Location: Ontario
Posts: 9

Canada 2011 Range Rover Supercharged 5.0 SC V8 Barolo Black

I have the following codes.

P0716-21
Turbine/Input Shaft Speed Sensor Circuit
Range/Performance - Signal Amplitude < Minimum

P0850-8F
Park/Neutral Switch Input Circuit - Erratic

P0700-02
Transmission Control System (Mil Request): General Signal Failure

Post #703534 31st Oct 2024 9:46pm
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RRPhil



Member Since: 22 Aug 2011
Location: Blackburn, Lancashire
Posts: 962

United Kingdom 

The Turbine/Input shaft speed sensor and the Park/Neutral switch are mounted on the same plastic component which is a separate part of the electronic module of the Mechatronic unit. The six connections I’ve labelled A to F in the photo are for the -ve, L1, L2, L3 & L4 and +ve connections for the Park/Neutral switch. F & G are the +ve & speed data terminals for the speed sensor. The positive feed F is shared by the two. I suspect this is where your fault lies.







Phil

Post #703535 1st Nov 2024 12:53am
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Kuret



Member Since: 07 Feb 2024
Location: Ontario
Posts: 9

Canada 2011 Range Rover Supercharged 5.0 SC V8 Barolo Black

Thanks for the tip Phil. I am due for a transmission filter and fluid swap so I will pull the valve body and mechatronics unit while I am in there.

How do I remove the plastic housing to get at Pin F?

Post #703563 1st Nov 2024 1:35pm
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RRPhil



Member Since: 22 Aug 2011
Location: Blackburn, Lancashire
Posts: 962

United Kingdom 

I see you have a 2011 5.0 SC, so you have the 6HP28X transmission. The connection between the position switch/speed sensor assembly and the rest of the electronic module does not involve any wires. All the circuits between the ECU and the sensors are on metal bars which are spot welded together.







This (theoretically) makes it more reliable but at the same time makes any DIY attempts at troubleshooting and rectification very difficult. Several companies offer a specialist service for repairing these units, probably the best known of which is Softelectronic https://www.softelectronic.com/item/repair...ml?lang=en

Aftermarket Chinese-made position switch/input speed sensor assemblies are available on AliExpress, eBay, Amazon, etc. but I have no experience of fitting these or information regarding their quality/reliability, I’m afraid.


Just for added complication, there was a change during 2012MY. The 6HP28X in the L322 used a Continental electronic module (6058 007 122) from VIN AA000001 to CA390072 and then a Bosch unit (6058 007 117) from CA390073 onwards. The position switch was different for both – you can see immediately that the PCB for the four Hall sensors (L1 to L4) is a different shape.





Click image to enlarge

Continental Hall sensor PCB



Bosch Hall sensor PCB


Edit
Both orthopod and Kuret have 2011 5.0 SC models which feature the 6HP28X transmission and, in all likelihood, they have the Continental electronic module for the TCM (can confirm if their VINs are between AA000001 and CA390072). I should have pointed out that the ‘metal bars with spot welds’ feature that I mentioned above as being the internal electrical connection method, relates only to the Bosch electronic modules. The Continental ones use a ribbon cable to connect the ECU to the various input/output components, including the gear position switch. For whatever reason, Land Rover reverted back to the Bosch design from VIN CA390073 onwards. I wonder if this is significant?

Phil

Post #703593 2nd Nov 2024 1:00am
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