Skip to content

MINI Cooper R55 R56 R60 Engine Control Unit Failures (ECU/DME)

Your MINI’s ECU clunked out? Here’s how to avoid a huge bill    

 

MINI cars have always been fun to drive, quirky little bundles of joy. That recipe applied to them ever since they came out and even had a different name. Their compact size and special architecture meant that they could be thrown around everywhere without too much fuss but with huge amounts of adrenaline infused into the driver’s system.

The lightweight construction and decent levels of power meant you could have fun with one without things becoming dangerous in any way. Over the years, the cars might’ve grown in size but the fun factor is still pretty huge which is why most owners love their cars.

Therefore, when issues start popping up, it’s understandable that they feel bad. Fun cars become members of the family over time and the MINI-branded models are most likely to get a nickname during ownership. Unfortunately, as fun and cute as they may be, they are also not the most reliable cars out there. One unusually common issue you could face is an ECU failure.

When that happens, the car won’t start most of the time. At first, you’ll get a misfire error and maybe you’ll get into limp home mode, which isn’t fun at all. Then the engine management light could pop up and once you read your codes, you’ll find a plethora of them, signaling that there’s something deeply off. If one of them is a ‘internal failure’ error, you’re heading to an ECU complete failure.

And sometimes the ECU will just stop communicating, this can happen from a lose ground on the cylindered or simply a technician forgetting to screw the ground bolt back on.

Eventually, the car won’t start at all and you’ll have to do something about it. As you may very well know, this means a new ECU will be offered by your local dealer and that comes with a hefty price tag. Fret not though as there are alternatives to that issue.

You can have yours fixed or replaced with another ECU pulled from a similar car from a salvage yard or look for an ECU online. If your original ECU is still communicating, you can have it shipped along with a replacement unit to a specialist that will rewrite the software inside the latter to make sure it works with your car. This is necessary so that the DME on your MINI doesn’t block out the new ECU once installed. You’ll have to manually remove the ECU yourself and install it back in, but even so, you’ll be saving a lot of money compared to what a dealer would ask for a completely new one.

Want to Order your Mini Cooper USED DME Service today?

Mini Cooper R56/R60 Used ECU Programming 04/2006 to 07/2013

Want to Order a Re-Manufactured DME today?

BMW MINI COOPER R56 R57 R58 R59 R60 R61 RMFD ECU's 2007 to 2016

Previous article BMW Used DME Programming Explanation
Next article SCR / DPF Delete - DPF clogged? Here’s how to fix it