The Vauxhall Astra was on a shared drive off Marsh Road in Luton, ABS light on the dash. The owner had her arms crossed in the way people stand when they have already been told expensive news by someone else. Her brother-in-law had taken it to a local garage that week. They said the ABS pump had gone, somewhere north of a thousand pounds.
I got my scanner out of the van before I said anything.
The code that pulled was C0035, left front wheel speed sensor, circuit fault. That is not an ABS pump code. It is not adjacent to one, not related to one, not a sign of one. A pump code has a completely different address and a live data signature that looks nothing like this.
Here is where this code gets misread. C0035 is a starting point, not a verdict. I have seen it come from a failed sensor, from corroded wiring, from a broken tone ring, and from internal ABS module damage. The code looks identical each time and tells you nothing about which one it is.
What my scanner showed in live data was the left front sensor returning no signal at all, flatline, nothing. The other three wheels were reading clean speed data. That confirmed the fault was on that corner. It did not confirm where on that corner.
I went to the wheel with a torch. The sensor connector had the specific grey-white oxidation you get on cars that live year-round on salted UK roads. Not surface rust, the kind that works its way into the pin contacts over three or four winters and starts breaking the circuit intermittently before it fails completely. I have pulled hundreds of these connectors off and this one fought me the way the bad ones always do.
Here is the moment the job changed. I tested resistance across the sensor itself and it read fine, correct resistance, no open circuit, no short. The sensor was healthy. So C0035 was pointing at the right corner, but not the right component.

The break was about sixty centimetres from the connector, where the wiring had been rubbing against the inner arch liner since the car left the factory. The insulation had worn through, the conductor had corroded from the inside, and the sensor, which was perfectly healthy, had been getting no power for who knows how long.
The repair was a new section of wiring, proper automotive solder, heat shrink, and a replacement connector. Parts cost under forty pounds. The fault code cleared and did not return. Live data showed all four sensors reading cleanly and we drove it up Marsh Road with the ABS cycling correctly under a firm stop.
I have filmed this exact fault on Astras three times for YouTube. The comments on those videos are full of people who have been quoted hundreds of pounds for sensors and pumps on cars where the wiring is the actual problem. That pattern tells me this is not a rare edge case. It is something that happens regularly on British roads and gets misdiagnosed regularly for the same reason.
That garage had scanned the car, seen a wheel speed sensor code, and priced the most expensive component they could associate with it. I am not saying that is always deliberate. Some of it is diagnostic laziness. Some of it is working with a scanner that shows codes but no live data, which means you are operating with half the picture and filling the rest with assumption.
I have watched drivers carry ABS warning lights for six, twelve, eighteen months and I understand why. The car still stops. The pedal still feels normal. When money is tight, a light with no obvious accompanying danger is very easy to file away and leave there.
The gap between a forty-pound repair and a thousand-pound repair is rarely about the fault deteriorating over time. It is about who diagnoses it and how thoroughly. A wheel speed sensor costs between eighty and a hundred and fifty pounds fitted on most common British cars. A genuine ABS pump, when it actually is the pump, costs considerably more and needs confirming with live data before anyone goes near it.
That Astra is still on the road. She messaged me four months later about a DPF light. Different fault, same principle, the warning light is never the diagnosis. It is the beginning of one.

Jimmy O’Riley is a UK-based mobile mechanic and automotive diagnostic specialist operating out of Bedfordshire, England. He founded O’Rileys Autos in 2011 with a focus on bringing professional vehicle repairs directly to customers at their homes and workplaces.
With over a decade of hands-on experience, Jimmy specializes in ABS diagnostics, brake system repairs, diesel emissions faults, and DPF cleaning. He is recognized across the UK and Ireland as one of the leading specialists in vehicle braking and emissions systems, earning the title “The DPF King” from his growing online audience.
Jimmy documents real-world automotive repairs through his YouTube channel, which has accumulated over 97,000 subscribers and nearly 2,000 published repair videos. His content covers ABS fault diagnosis, wheel speed sensor testing, brake module replacement, and roadside repair procedures across a wide range of vehicle makes and models.
He is active on YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook under O’Rileys Autos.
