I got curious and started looking at that schematic http://www.dmcnews.com/Techsection/graphics/lockcirc.jpg and my OEM door lock module. I've made the following observations: 1) There is an error in Dave Swingle's schematic. The brown/slate wire at terminal #2 should be erased from the junction linking R1 and the emitter of Q1 and instead be connected to the junction linking R2, D3 and RL1. This would make it match the sister circuit below it. 2) The diode D4 is also toast on my module. It melted the insulation on the violet wire and the leads are corroded on both ends. 3) The apparent function of D4 in this circuit is to drain the battery. Well, this isn't far from the truth. I think the designer meant for it to protect the transistors from surges. If you are going to try to improve this module, it would be easier to just start from scratch with a new design. But if you really want to fix it, I would recommend (and I'm starting to get in a little over my head here) a diode that has a high reverse impedance and can take a forward current of 1 amp or so. A ziener diode would be better if the avalanche voltage is well enough over 12 volts so that it doesn't conduct normal operating voltages. But I would choose something really beefy. It is a trade off -- the beefier the diode, the more it will drain the battery. A better choice may be to put a capacitor or an MOV on there if they make one that operates at a low enough voltage to do any good. Here is one of my typical long winded explanations. This one is a 'walk through' on how the module operates. If you read this, you have too much time on your hands. If you understand any of it, you are a geek. If it is useful to you then you probably could have figured it out on your own anyway. But it never hurts to have a second opinion. When the 'door unlock' switch is closed, electrons come from ground through the switch and through the brown/pink wire into the module at terminal #3. Current flow proceeds forward biased through diode D5. From here it goes through the electromagnet of the relay RL11 energizing it. From the other end of the relay coil, current proceeds forward biased through diode D12 and to the emitter of the transistor and one side of resistor R11. >From here two things happen: First, current flows through the transistor to terminal #4 and through the violet wire to the positive side of the battery completing the circuit. The transistor acts like a latching switch permitting the relay to stay energized even when the door unlock switch is opened. This is accomplished by biasing the transistor through diode D13 and resistor R12. Here it is evident that the function of diodes D5 and D13 placed back-to-back are to allow the transistor to be switched on without the door unlock switch interfering with the transistor's bias. The second thing that happens is that current begins flowing from ground though capacitor C11 and resistor R11 and on through the transistor along with the current that came through the relay coil. R11 and C11 make up what is called an R/C timing circuit. This is a cheap simple way of making an electronic timer. The purpose of resistor R11 is to limit the amount of current flowing through capacitor C11 so that it charges slowly. How long it takes capacitor C11 to charge is how long the timer lasts. Once this R/C circuit has charged to a certain point, it upsets the bias on transistor Q11 causing it to switch off. The end purpose is that the amount of time that this circuit is active determines the duration of the pulse sent to the lock solenoids. The reason for diode D12 is to stop the R/C circuit from charging through resistor R12 and to keep the battery from draining while the circuit is inactive. The purpose of diode D11 is to stop surges generated by the lock solenoids from spiking through transistor Q11 and damaging it. When the solenoids are through moving and the current applied to them is shut off, the magnetic field set up around the solenoids' coils collapses. As it collapses, it induces a current in the coils making them appear as very high voltage sources in a polarity opposite to that which they originally had. Even though they seem isolated from the transistor when the relay contacts release, they can still zap the transistor as the contacts are letting go. The easiest way to deal with this is to let a diode shunt it. The same technique is also used on A/C compressor clutches. This is my OPINION on how the 'unlock' side of the door lock module operates based on Dave Swingle's diagram. Remember, this my opinion and I have been wrong before. The lock side works the same way, but if you are looking at Dave Swingle's diagram, the error on the 'lock' part may confuse you. Walt Tampa, FL