maverickagm
Enthusiast
I have a 1993. As the title says, when coming to a stop my rpms will drop to near zero. It's even stalled a couple of times. At operating temperature the idle seems low. It shows closer to 575 that 704+-25. Yes I am reading the gauge correctly. Yes I realize the first mark just after 0 is actually 500 rpm, and the second is 750 rpm.
I've been changing things one at a time and retesting. The problem still persists.
1) Cleaned throttle bodies.
2) Had battery load tested. It was like new. This would inevitably include a PCM reset.
3) cleaned Idle Air Control (IAC) valve.
4) replaced the IAC
I had an instance where the throttle would suddenly surge back and forth from 1500 rpm to ~2200 rpm. I became suspect of the Throttle Position Sensor (TPS).
5) Measured voltage from TPS. As a reference, here's how I did that:
i. Open hood. Turn the key to ON (but don't actually start the car). The TPS is on the driver's side throttle body.
ii. There's a plug with 3 wires. Top is Ground. Middle is the sense wire. Bottom is 5 volt supply. I can fit my multimeter probes int the back of the plug while it is connected. You could also use a sewing needle to put in the back of the connector then touch the probe to that.
iii. I checked between 5v supply and ground and got an even 5 volts.
iv. I checked between ground and the sense wire. 0.72 volts at the idle stop. 3.63 volts when I fully open the throttle body. The service manual states I should get aprox 0.65v at idle and 3.8v at wide open throttle.
v. I slowly open and close the throttle and watch the voltmeter slowly increase and decrease.
Here's a picture of what it all looks like. Negative probe is in the back of the top plug wire. Sewing needle is in the middle. Positive prove is touching the sewing needle. The reading where the same with and without the sewing needle. It just made it easier.
6) When measuring the volts of the TPS, I opened up the throttle and rapidly closed it. I did this about 30 times. Two of the times I saw the volts drop briefly to 0.45 volts and 0.65 volts. I then replaced the TPS.
It's still happening. My next step is to (mark first) then play with the throttle position stop screw. My current theory is the throttle blades close and choke the engine of air, then the IAC opens the pintle to compensate. However the IAC motor is too slow to react. The service manual mentions an Idle RPM Test:
"With the engine at normal operating temperature
and the idle air control motor pintle fully extended,
the engine should idle at 704 ±25 RPM. Use the
DRBII scan tool to fully extend the idle air control
motor."
With the IAC pintle fully extended, that should close off air coming through the IAC and all the air should be coming through the throttle bodies. That leads me to believe the IAC is mostly responsible for adding extra air when the air conditioning or headlights are turned on (which adds slight engine load that would normally lower the RPM). I don't have a DRB 2 scan tool, but perhaps I can open up each throttle body in increments and stop when the idle rpm rises beyond 700.
Has anyone else ever actually solved this problem?
I've been changing things one at a time and retesting. The problem still persists.
1) Cleaned throttle bodies.
2) Had battery load tested. It was like new. This would inevitably include a PCM reset.
3) cleaned Idle Air Control (IAC) valve.
4) replaced the IAC
I had an instance where the throttle would suddenly surge back and forth from 1500 rpm to ~2200 rpm. I became suspect of the Throttle Position Sensor (TPS).
5) Measured voltage from TPS. As a reference, here's how I did that:
i. Open hood. Turn the key to ON (but don't actually start the car). The TPS is on the driver's side throttle body.
ii. There's a plug with 3 wires. Top is Ground. Middle is the sense wire. Bottom is 5 volt supply. I can fit my multimeter probes int the back of the plug while it is connected. You could also use a sewing needle to put in the back of the connector then touch the probe to that.
iii. I checked between 5v supply and ground and got an even 5 volts.
iv. I checked between ground and the sense wire. 0.72 volts at the idle stop. 3.63 volts when I fully open the throttle body. The service manual states I should get aprox 0.65v at idle and 3.8v at wide open throttle.
v. I slowly open and close the throttle and watch the voltmeter slowly increase and decrease.
Here's a picture of what it all looks like. Negative probe is in the back of the top plug wire. Sewing needle is in the middle. Positive prove is touching the sewing needle. The reading where the same with and without the sewing needle. It just made it easier.
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6) When measuring the volts of the TPS, I opened up the throttle and rapidly closed it. I did this about 30 times. Two of the times I saw the volts drop briefly to 0.45 volts and 0.65 volts. I then replaced the TPS.
It's still happening. My next step is to (mark first) then play with the throttle position stop screw. My current theory is the throttle blades close and choke the engine of air, then the IAC opens the pintle to compensate. However the IAC motor is too slow to react. The service manual mentions an Idle RPM Test:
"With the engine at normal operating temperature
and the idle air control motor pintle fully extended,
the engine should idle at 704 ±25 RPM. Use the
DRBII scan tool to fully extend the idle air control
motor."
With the IAC pintle fully extended, that should close off air coming through the IAC and all the air should be coming through the throttle bodies. That leads me to believe the IAC is mostly responsible for adding extra air when the air conditioning or headlights are turned on (which adds slight engine load that would normally lower the RPM). I don't have a DRB 2 scan tool, but perhaps I can open up each throttle body in increments and stop when the idle rpm rises beyond 700.
Has anyone else ever actually solved this problem?
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