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Throttle Position Sensor

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Revision as of 20:11, 7 March 2007 by 89.243.71.230 (Talk)

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Throttle Position Sensor

Background

A bad TPS can have many effects:

hesitation on acceleration rough idle jerkiness rough running

Method

To identify a bad TPS, check the following methods:

extract the fault codes using a FCR (fault code reader) remove the connector from the TPS (push the securing spring, then pull the plug down), check for any corrosion/deposits. They should be spot clean. Use some contact spray for minor cases. the process described below.

It is a foolproof method. It requires only a metal pin, a multimeter with high imput impedance (any digital model will do) and some crocodile clamp leads.

Connect the black (negative) lead to a CLEAN engine part (ground) Set the multimeter to the range that allows measurement of 0-15V (usually that will be 20V. Only DC will work. Use a set of pliers to force the pin THROUGH the middle lead. Connect the TPS to the connector Connect the red lead to the pin Switch on the ignition, but DO NOT START THE ENGINE. The multimeter should read at least 0.4V. Move the throttle SLOWLY through its entire range while watching the multimeter: When the trottle is full open, the meter should read 4.2V or more. (max 5V). Go through this process several times, as slowly as possible. You should see 0.01V steps.

The readout should, at all times, follow the linear motion of the throttle. If, the throttle is slowly opened, the readout should NEVER drop. If the throttle is slowly closed, the readout should NEVER rise. Not even for a short blip. If it falls to 0 at any given time, that is a 100% sure fire way to tell the TPS is gone.

Submitted by lurchy666