Calibrating the Voltage on the TPS
Ok,so I done this,here's how:
- Get several feet of wire. At least 6ft to make life easy. Cut them into 6 1' pieces and strip the ends. Now twist 2 pieces of wire together. So now you have 3 2' wires with the ends stripped and a stripped spot in the middle.
- There are 3 wires/pins for the tps sensor. 2 outside wires are ground and 5v source. Middle wire is the return voltage on the tps.
- Remove the throttle body, and connect your new spliced wires to the pins on the tps sensor on the throttle body and the pins on the wiring harness.
- Now connect your multimeter to the 2 outside wires (easiest to do this at the stripped points in the middle of the wires). This will also show you which wire is ground and wich is 5v.
- Turn the ignition to on (but do not start the car).
- Verify that you have 5v going to the tps.
- Now connect the multimeter to ground and the middle wire to measure tps voltage.
- TPS sensor is held in place by 2 screws. Open the throttle rotor to WOT and keep rotating the sensor until you get the output shown on the multimeter to 4.5v.
- Tighten tps sensor down & adjust idle setting screw shown in the pic below. Adjust this until the idle reading on the tps is about 0.48-0.49v.
- Now double check that WOT & idle tps readings are correct and put it all back together.
http://www.superhonda.com/forum/f49/tps-voltage-239633/
http://hondaswap.com/~pills/obd1guide.html
I got the 5V reading.
I couldn't get a 4.5V reading though.When I turned the TPS sensor as far as it will go it only read 3.25V.
The car goes much better now! :) but the idle is high at 1500rpm when in park (auto) also the engine check light is on (I reset the ECU but still on).I will need to do a code check.
I left the idle screw screwed right in how it was.If I turned it out it idle's far too high.
Why can't I get a higher reading,to 4.5V on the sensor at WOT?
I just thought,for WOT I got a mate to hold the throttle open in the engine bay instead of putting a foot on the pedal.The throttle was open more than if you had put your foot on the pedal,maybe that affected the reading?