My car is well known for its cursed door locks, the dreaded Mabuchi FC-280 motors die every 2-5 years.
Although it's a bit random, some doors will fail a lot faster than others after replacing the motor, although they all do the same work.
I blame it to Aliexpress quality but still better to change $4 twice than $150 in a new lock.
I already fixed them several times, but eventually any of the 4 doors will break again.
Then it's a f** mess, as the car tries to open the doors, one or more won't do so it'll close back.
You might fight it but after several tries the system will shutoff the remote for a while.
Of course I just ended using the feecking key, but it's a shame in winter with the wind, rain and all that, you want to get in/out fast!

So I've been doing some research trying to find a compact brushless solution fitting inside the lock itself, needing minimal modification.
Picturses of the door lock internals and the stupid motor:

It moves a reduction gear that later spins a worm gear, so it requires very little torque.
The central locking simply switches the polarity of the motor pins to close or open the lock.
My idea is to pass them through a rectifier, then use one of the unrectified wires to detect the direction and toggle the appropiate control pin.
A motor with built-in controller would be great, but I need it to be able to rotate in reverse.
I've found some, but still too big: The 2412/2418 are 24mm wide...
www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005389098818.htmlwww.aliexpress.com/item/1005002787368480.htmlSo far I haven't found smaller ones with integrated controller.
The second option is to get naked motors, using a external controller.
www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005368897031.htmlwww.aliexpress.com/item/1005005354667188.htmlBut the controllers I found either where too bulky, used some digital protocol or had no way to reverse the rotation.
I ended researching a simple BLDC driver and making a little pcb using the DRV10974, fitting in 13x7mm.
I know, I know, that cap-on-pin hack it's terrible, sacrifices to get it as small as possible

The power will be about 2-3 amps at most, but only for2 seconds, I think the 1-Amp rectifier will survive that, not having time to heat up.
The adventure continues....