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unstable idle
- quarkhimself
- Posts: 190
- Joined: Sun Jun 16, 2013 8:56 pm
- My Generation: 4G
- PSN GamerTag: quarkhimself
- Location: southampton
- quarkhimself
- Posts: 190
- Joined: Sun Jun 16, 2013 8:56 pm
- My Generation: 4G
- PSN GamerTag: quarkhimself
- Location: southampton
ok so i did exactly like in the video, and the engine tries to stall like you said. i can hear a pop sound when i remove my finger.the idle only starts to go up an down after i touch the throttle, could it be related to the TPS ?
'91 4th gen SI VTEC 4WS JDM phantom gray H22a SALE AGREED
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- Posts: 340
- Joined: Sat Oct 12, 2013 2:05 am
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- XBOX GamerTag: Masta Cutz
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before you proceed any further check your Throttle Position Sensor...quarkhimself wrote:i got the iacv out and cleaned it, it was quite dirty and now is really clean.i also had another look at the fitv, that plastic thing was tightened all the way, so i turned it 3/4 of a turn loose.i also removed the radio fuse for about 5 minutes.put everything back together and the temperature gauge reaches the half point without any troubles, but as soon as i touch the throttle it starts to go up and down again. this time it seems i made some kind of small progress because it only happens when hot after i touch the throttle and it seems like it goes from around 700-1200 instead of 700-1500.could this be related to the TPS ? is there anything i can do to test or fix the TPS ?
get out your multimeter (i'm assuming you have one).
measure the voltage between D11 (red/black) & D22 (green/white) on your ECU -- they are both on same multiplug going to the ECU.
With the ignition on and foot off the throttle you should read 0.5v on the multimeter. with your foot flat to the floor it shoud read 4.5v.
as you slowly touch the throttle the reading will go up SMOOTHLY from 0.5v to 4.5v accross the throttle range.
if the reading jumps at all or your start or ending voltages are different you may very well have problems.
if the TPS is out of range i.e. it reads 0.3v to 4.3v then you will need to loosen it from the throttle body and rotate it slowly until it reads right....only problem is you need to take the voltage readings AT THE ECU, otherwise your reading might be slightly off and defeats the whole object of trying to sort it.
hope that helps
- SPYDOR
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What do you mean by 'AT THE ECU' exactly? I tested mine recently by following a guide which showed them fitting a wire/paperclip into the positive middle wire on the TPS connector and grounding the other wire elsewhere.Cutz wrote:only problem is you need to take the voltage readings AT THE ECU, otherwise your reading might be slightly off and defeats the whole object of trying to sort it.
FYI My readings were 0.029v closed and 0.273v WOT which is nowhere near what is it supposed to be.


No idea why the readings are so strange on mine but not worried as it works great and the readings show correctly on my Apexi AFC.
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- Location: Northampton
SPYDOR wrote:What do you mean by 'AT THE ECU' exactly? I tested mine recently by following a guide which showed them fitting a wire/paperclip into the positive middle wire on the TPS connector and grounding the other wire elsewhere.Cutz wrote:only problem is you need to take the voltage readings AT THE ECU, otherwise your reading might be slightly off and defeats the whole object of trying to sort it.
FYI My readings were 0.029v closed and 0.273v WOT which is nowhere near what is it supposed to be.I also tested the map sensor just to make sure they had not been swapped somehow. Before you ask, I know how to use my multimeter correctly...
No idea why the readings are so strange on mine but not worried as it works great and the readings show correctly on my Apexi AFC.
the reason why you test it at the ECU is that you need to find out exactly what voltage the ECU is seeing.
if you test for voltage at the sensor, then you are not taking into consideration the internal wire resistance from ECU to sensor. i.e. if you test at sensor and set it to 0.5v by the time it gets to the ECU it could only be 0.4v or lower...you need a reference point to set the sensor from.
I've got a H22A swap in my EK civic which involved extending the engine wiring harness by at least 30cm...so i knew there wasa possiblity some sensors wouldn't be reading quite true, generally its not a problem but with the TPS it is.
e.g. the ECU sees 0.50v as the TPS being @ 0%, so if the ECU sees 0.43v instead of 0.50v it will assumes the TPS is approx -4% (negative figure), this can play havoc with your ECU because the sensor is outside it's predefined limits.
make sense?
- quarkhimself
- Posts: 190
- Joined: Sun Jun 16, 2013 8:56 pm
- My Generation: 4G
- PSN GamerTag: quarkhimself
- Location: southampton
i don't have a multimeter, never used one.i'll get the exhaust leak and the cam belt done soon, if that doesn't fix the problem i may try to replace the whole throttle body, looks easier to do instead of just replacing the TPS.
'91 4th gen SI VTEC 4WS JDM phantom gray H22a SALE AGREED
FOR SALE - 4TH GEN REAR BUMPER UKDM SHERWOOD GREEN

FOR SALE - 4TH GEN REAR BUMPER UKDM SHERWOOD GREEN