Chinesium - not even once! TPMS woes




I bought four Chinesium sensors when I got a set of four snow tires. One of the sensors began intermittently failing to transmit. I isolated the sensor and had a tire shop peel the tire and re-mount after swapping the sensor. A couple of thousand miles later, failure again. I couldn't believe it was either the new sensor or one more of the old, so I investigated the TPMS module and antenna. News flash: The antenna is under an underbody panel that has a ridiculous number of fasteners holding it on. Both looked reasonable, so I started the round-robin wheel replacement again. Sigh. Yes it's one more of the Chinesium sensors. At least now I know which it is.
But to aggravate me even further: Yet another of the sensors is dying, intermittently failing to transmit. Probably one of the other Chinesium, right? So I should just replace all the rest, right? But unfortunately, of my set of five additional wheels, one of them contains the spare Chinesium that I got as a freebie to replace the failing one - and I don't know which wheel it is on.
Get first-quality sensors. These Chinesium apparently last only about 20K miles best case. Rock Auto sells only the BH (which stands for Baolong Huf, but I can only hope they know what they are doing), and TPMSDirect sells Huf. I note that Siemens sensors apparently are not sold anymore. Given the narrow window in which these motion-activated 433MHz sensors were installed, I would not be surprised to find them out of production before too much more time goes by.
Last edited by eric_in_sd; Oct 31, 2023 at 10:14 PM.
The other two are still working. its amazing that those original sensors lasted 17 years (115k miles).
The original sensors are "Siemens VDO Daimer Chrysler 433.92MHz"
Discount tires used the "BHsens Intellisens UVS7050 73.913.750 315/433MHz" sensors.
No programing was performed and the "tire pressure monitor inoperative" warning message is gone.




I ordered a set of four Huf sensors, which should be the same as the BH, as the H stands for Huf and the picture on Rock Auto shows a Huf marking. I hope they build them to the standards of the Siemens.
The sensors go to sleep when the wheel is not turning, but still - 117K is over three thousand hours of transmitting.
ATEQ VT5s Universal TPMS Sensor Activator and Trigger Tool for TPMS Resets - compatible with Domestic and European vehicles equipped with TPMS https://a.co/d/71BDWbq




ATEQ VT5s Universal TPMS Sensor Activator and Trigger Tool for TPMS Resets - compatible with Domestic and European vehicles equipped with TPMS https://a.co/d/71BDWbq
Unless they are 100% pure Chinesium, that is.




How does it tell you it is receiving a signal?
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