CaliforniaCabbie wrote:Hi everyone, I'm new to the forum, and I've just found out that I'm inheriting a black 1992 VW Cabriolet! Anyway, this thing has more than a few problems. If ANYONE has any idea what ANY of these things may be, PLEASE post!
Problem 1: Happens about once a day. Loses power, then lurches back to life, stays running. It took almost a year until we could find a mechanic who would even make a guess at what it was; he said it was the ECU computer, the correct type of which (for a 1992) is never on eBay. Any guesses?
Problem 2: It rained a while ago (the cabbie leaks like a sieve as of now) and some water leaked onto the power window switches. Now, whenever it rains, the windows roll themselves down.

Just glad I don't have a power top!
Tell me, should I let the car die and make a down payment on a Jaguar (no soul, but fast) or should I revive my Volkswagen? I hate to get rid of the Cabbie, I have so many memories of it (including pickicking it up at the dealership in 1992 with my dad) but I kind of began to lose patience when the window thing started.

It would make a really cool California beach cruiser, though! Thanks all!
Problem 1. Bad Grounds or resisitive battery cables are the bane of cars exsistance.
Replace the main ground, clean all others. Make sure that your fuse box is not corroded and buy a Bentley.
Problem number 2.
The window control unit is directly under the fresh air inlet. If your Rain tray is missing and or your drains for the rain tray are plugged with crap, that can allow water to pool, and over flow under your fresh air vent and directly on your electric control unit for your windows. Take it off and open it up, and pour 100 proof alcohol on it, or you can try squirting WD40 is there to displace the moisture.
A plugged rain tray drain by the ecu can cause water to back up and get into the connector of the ECU which is on the rain tray near the drivers side upper.
Corrosion on the grounds or electrical connectors is the primary cause of frustration for all car owners. 99 times out of ten, the dealer or independant shop will have it farmed out.
I would replace the positive and the negative cables on your cabby. Then work out what works and what don't
I have been led down the garden path rebuilding distributors till in frustration I threw my wrench. It shorted between frame and ground of the batter and it sparked.
But a 5 dollar VOM (Multimeter) and measure the voltage with the car running on the battery it shoud be 13v + or - .5 . If it isn't then you have a bad cable. Measure the voltage between the negative battery lead and the chassis it should be 0 anything less and you have a bad ground.
All the symptoms that you describe are either flakey grounds or flakey +12.
The switches getting wet, if they aren't dried out, dosen't suprize me that as you are driving the water shorts out the switch and the window goes down. Take them out and spray the bahooties out of them with wd40 after a good shaking.