Thanks for the reply guys.
93_Clubman wrote:Aust domestic market NA6 didn't have an immobiliser fitted from the factory, & I don't believe the early Japanese domestic market NA6 did either. Is your NA6 ADM or JDM, i.e. 'JM0NA' or 'NA6CE' in VIN?
AUDM. Having looked around now, definitely aftermarket. Ancient aftermarket though, and absolutely no markings on the unit, except for a code 1873 that appears on the box and on the chipboard itself. After googling around, the only immobilizer i could find is a Wheels 3-way BA5000 unit. But it's not that one.
Mr Morlock wrote:the man said "I seem to be having trouble with the immobilizer fitted". An often repeated phrase. Apart from whether its worth having them at all, if you do the best bet is go to a specialist on immobilisers. In my area there is a bloke who sorts this out and apparently at a decent price. The problem for many of us- ie like me- is that we do not understand enough or anything about electronics or the previous owner did not either but still fitted it. These things just go past the reliable stage and a dead car is not a good look. I would expect 93 is right- its an aftermarket unit.
Lucky the car is a bit of a project and I rarely drive it. I'll try to tinker myself for a bit when I have the time, but in the end I may need to call one lol.
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Okay so today was the first time since OP that I've been down to take a look at the car.
Tried plugging battery back in a starting it. Would crank but not fire? I assumed it was still coz of the immobilizer.So I went to take a look at removing the immobilizer, carefully marking what wires went where. I removed the steering surround and the panel directly beneath and traced the wire of the flashing immobiliser LED.
Found a little black box with several wires all connecting to the ignition harness and loom directly back from that.
Turns out none of the wires were actually re-routed, only spliced/bridged mid-wire (T-connection) from the ignition loom/harness into the little black box.
I was able to remove the immobiliser box and the bridged wires while retaining all OEM wire paths.
This is the immobiliser unit I removed:

There don't appear to be any buttons (e.g. some units have a button to reset, etc). There is however that long black piece to the top right which rotates, e.g. im thinking its like those alarm systems with vibration sensitivity. Although this car didn't ever seem to have an alarm.
Wire 1 - to LED negative
Wire 2 - (blank)
Wire 3 - to ignition harness
Wire 4 - (blank)
Wire 5 - ground
Wire 6 - to ignition harness (further back down the loom), spliced into green
Wire 7 - to ignition harness (further back down the loom), spliced into green/white
Wire 8 - to LED positive (but also a T into ignition harness)
Wire 11 - (blank)
There was also another wire from the thick blue wire in the ignition harness that led under the carpet and wasn't connected to anything? so i removed it.
All the wiring on the ignition harness/loom appears stock and in-tact. Can't see anything else thats been cut or running anywhere else + all remaining wires and tape look OEM. Overall it was a very neat removal and I was sure it would start again no problems.
So i plugged the battery back in... and
it continued to crank, no ignition.Ran out of time.
Hmmmmm... will continue tomorrow.
Does anyone know if these ancient immobiliser units have any other wires usually running to the starter motor or anything? Or is it able to immobilise simply with these few wires connected to the ignition harness.
Because it's now only cranking and not firing (like it was just before i removed the unit); I'm not sure if its because of the immobiliser now (or lack of complete removal and remaining wires?), or if its a mechanical reason, e.g. car has not been started for about a few weeks.
Putting the unit back on is a simple matter of bridging back those 4-5 wires so can be un-done anytime.
Let me know if anyone has any ideas.