So after a grand total of 8 days of Nissan ownership, it broke down on me....
My regular cheapy ($100) scantool was as useless as the proverbial on a bull. After a little research, I found an article posted online be 4x4 Australia magazine ( http://www.4x4australia.com.au/gear/...03/scan-tools/ ) outlining why a scantool should be carried by every 4x4er out bush which also stated that a lot of pre-2007 nissans (and TD05 land rovers, yuck...) wont talk to these generic tools.
Before purchasing this vehicle, I did a fair bit of research on common issues and what to look for. Two things came up, O2 sensor faults (easy and cheap fix) and electronic throttle-body faults ($1k replacement).
I did the old "disconnect the battery for a few hours" trick, and it seemed to clear. Started to drive home and ping, engine light and limp mode.
Luckily, a very good friend of mine has his own automotive shop and lent me his launch diagnostic tool.
Attachment 67246
Initially it cleared the codes, which ended up being P1122 ETC FUNCTION/CIRC, P1123 ETC MOT RLY/CIRC and P0134 HO2S1 (oxygen sensor code I suspect was thrown due to limp mode over fueling). A quick test drive later, and they had returned, but this time, it wouldn't let me erase them.
I did some googling and found a service bulletin ( http://www.autocodes.com/p1122_nissan.html ) regarding most fly-by-wire Nissans that instructs techs to preform the "Idle Air Volume Learning Procedure".
Attachment 67248
Time to see how good this Launch tool is, and as it turn out, very good. I was somewhat surprised to find that it did a lot of what the consult 2 does, including coding keys. I carried out the learning procedure which takes about 5 minutes and went for a quick test drive.
No light, no codes.
Yet.
The launch tool allows you to see, in real time, graphs and numerical displays of different sensors inputs and outputs. I went through and checked the TPS and Accel pedal outputs and all seem to be linear with no glitches or dead spots through their range. Hopefully this is a good indicator that there is no hard fault with the system and it simply needed re-calibrating.
Attachment 67247
Only time will tell.
I suggest, if anyone else experiences similar issues, to try this out before forking out for a $1000 part and more than likely a few hours of costly dealership labor.