The VW ID.3 is on a driveway off Woburn Road in Kempston, and the ABS light has been back on for eleven days. It went off three weeks ago. The owner assumed Volkswagen had fixed it remotely, which is what the notification on his phone suggested. He was not wrong about the update, but he was wrong about what the update had fixed.
I understand why he read it that way. Over-the-air updates genuinely fix real faults now, including ABS calibration errors that used to require a module replacement and a significant dealer bill. Getting a notification and seeing a warning light disappear feels like a resolution. For half of this fault, it was.
Before OTA existed on mainstream cars, I watched garages replace ABS modules on Mk7 Golfs and late-plate Focuses for software calibration faults. The module was the right part number, the labour was charged correctly, and the light went off. It would also have gone off if someone had reflashed the existing module, which nobody was doing because reflashing was specialist work and replacement was easier to price. That era produced a lot of unnecessary hardware replacements, and I am not going to pretend otherwise.
When I connect the interface to the ID.3 and pull the diagnostic data, the software fault that the update addressed is no longer present. The module health check shows clear on every parameter the update was meant to correct. But there is a live data anomaly on the rear left wheel speed sensor that the update did nothing to touch. The software fault was loud enough to be noticed first, and the sensor fault was underneath it.
Software does not reach hardware.
I got under the rear left corner and found what the live data was describing. The sensor connector on the ID.3 sits behind a heat shield that is meant to keep it away from road spray. In practice, the conduit running the sensor loom had developed a split below the shield line, and it had been sitting like that for months. Eleven months of UK road salt had worked through that split and reached the pin housing.

The connector had that particular resistance when I unplugged it that you learn to associate with sustained damp: not stiff enough to fight you, but enough drag to tell you exactly what has been happening inside it. The distinction between what OTA updates fix and what they cannot touch is something I want to say clearly. Software faults, calibration errors, module initialisation bugs, incorrect firmware parameters: OTA handles all of that. Corroded connectors, split looms, failing sensors, damaged tone rings: none of that.
I cleaned the connector, resealed the conduit, applied dielectric grease to the pin housing, cleared the remaining fault code, and took the car on a road test while watching the live feed on all four corners. The rear left sensor came back clean and consistent across the whole test cycle. One visit, one connector, 38 pounds in parts. The module was not touched.
There is a version of this job, from before the ID.3 existed, where both faults get diagnosed together as a single module fault. The dealer quote for that job would have been somewhere around 900 pounds. The software component is now handled remotely and at no cost to the owner. The hardware component cost 38 pounds and an hour of time, and that genuinely represents an improvement in how these faults get resolved.
The OTA update fixed what it was designed to fix. The sensor fault it uncovered was always going to need someone on their knees behind a rear wheel, with a connector that did not want to come free.
What I notice on these newer EV platforms, after three or four UK winters, is that OTA has made owners less likely to follow up when a light returns. The first time this car's light cleared itself, the owner assumed the car had healed. The sensor fault had been logging intermittently for at least two months by the time he called me. The software update had done its job, and the hardware fault had carried on doing its own thing in the meantime.
OTA updates have removed one genuine category of unnecessary ABS repair, and I am glad they have. What OTA cannot do is get underneath a rear quarter in November and find a split conduit with a scope light. The cars are getting better at updating themselves. British roads are not getting better at leaving the wiring alone.

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.
