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engine troubles in vitara
engine troubles in vitara
hey guys my 1995 vitara jlx efi 1.6 is have engine troubles on idle it goes up and down from 200 to 1200 with out me touching it and when im driving it does the same just like the engine dies then it kicks back like it revs out then drops again it is im possibile to drive on road cant stsy at one speed what is wrong
God Of Emo
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Joined: Sun Aug 24, 2003 7:04 pm
Joined: Sun Aug 24, 2003 7:04 pm
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Just try adjusting it first, all thats needed is a basic multimeter. The method in the haynes manual is one of the few things that are correct (or close enough to work). If you can't get hold of it I or someone else can post it up.
Give a man a fire and he's warm for the day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life
'02 NM GLS 3.2DID ARB bar Bushskinz steps Rhino bars front air locker OME susp 265/75R16 AT's
'02 NM GLS 3.2DID ARB bar Bushskinz steps Rhino bars front air locker OME susp 265/75R16 AT's
I'm at work at the moment but it write it up as soon as I get home unless someone beats me to it.
You will need a multimeter, feeler guages (0.08mm and 0.05mm i think) and a stubby philips head screwdriver.
You will need a multimeter, feeler guages (0.08mm and 0.05mm i think) and a stubby philips head screwdriver.
Give a man a fire and he's warm for the day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life
'02 NM GLS 3.2DID ARB bar Bushskinz steps Rhino bars front air locker OME susp 265/75R16 AT's
'02 NM GLS 3.2DID ARB bar Bushskinz steps Rhino bars front air locker OME susp 265/75R16 AT's
i'm no vitara guru, but this sounds similar to an issue i have witnessed on a baleno motored sierra.. the problem turned out to be MAP sensor due to a split rubber vaccum hose on the engine.
it could be worth checking out your hoses first if you are trying to watch your wallet.
the other suggestion is to get your diagnostics tool (a piece of wire) and switch the diagnostics switch so your check engine light can flash out the ecm error codes for you. that would be a much better way of diagnosing the error - or at least getting a good ball park idea of what is wrong.
cheers
it could be worth checking out your hoses first if you are trying to watch your wallet.
the other suggestion is to get your diagnostics tool (a piece of wire) and switch the diagnostics switch so your check engine light can flash out the ecm error codes for you. that would be a much better way of diagnosing the error - or at least getting a good ball park idea of what is wrong.
cheers
DMA Founding Member #1 - Now Retired
All of this is done with the ignition off and testing the pins on the component not the pins on the plug that part of the harness.
If you unplug your fitted TPS it should have 4 pins. Name them A B C and D from bottom to top.
1)
Then using a multimeter the resistance between pins A and D should be 3.5 to 6.5 k ohms.
2)
Next check between pins A and C. With the throttle closed the resistance should be between 0.3 and 2 k ohms. With the throttle wide open is should be 2 to 6.5 k ohms.
3)
lastly (this is the fiddley part) put a 0.5mm feeler gauge between the throttle lever and stop screw (its on the throttle body. the screw should have some yellow or white crap on it). The resistance across pins A and B should be 0 to 500 ohms. Now change up to a 0.8mm feeler and check across pins A and B again now it should be open circuit (should read as 1 on most multimeters).
4)
If the measured values are out of these ranges then you need to try adjusting the TPS. Make a match mark were the TPS currently is (lets you out it back in the same spot if you have to). Now loosen the screw on the TPS so that you can rotate the TPS bot only with firm pressure. Put the 0.8mm feeler gauge back in between the throttle and the stop screw and hook up the multimeter between pins A and B. Now rotate the TPS slowly until the multimeter just reads and open circuit (or hoops between open and very high resistance). Now redo 1 to 3 and see if they are in range.
Repeat step four as many time has you need to to either get it in range or decide its .
The distilled version of all this would be
Pins on TPS are A to D bottom to top
Pin Pair resistance
A and D 3.5 to 3 k ohms
A and C (idle) 0.3 to 2 k ohms
A and C (WOT) 2 to 6.5 k ohms
A and B (0.5mm off idle) 0 to 500 ohms
A and B (0.8mm off idle) open circuit
I dont know if a dodgy IAC valve could case problems but if you unplug it and check the resistance between the two pins you should get between 11 and 14 ohms.
If anyone want to make any corrections feel free, I am working from haynes here.
If you unplug your fitted TPS it should have 4 pins. Name them A B C and D from bottom to top.
1)
Then using a multimeter the resistance between pins A and D should be 3.5 to 6.5 k ohms.
2)
Next check between pins A and C. With the throttle closed the resistance should be between 0.3 and 2 k ohms. With the throttle wide open is should be 2 to 6.5 k ohms.
3)
lastly (this is the fiddley part) put a 0.5mm feeler gauge between the throttle lever and stop screw (its on the throttle body. the screw should have some yellow or white crap on it). The resistance across pins A and B should be 0 to 500 ohms. Now change up to a 0.8mm feeler and check across pins A and B again now it should be open circuit (should read as 1 on most multimeters).
4)
If the measured values are out of these ranges then you need to try adjusting the TPS. Make a match mark were the TPS currently is (lets you out it back in the same spot if you have to). Now loosen the screw on the TPS so that you can rotate the TPS bot only with firm pressure. Put the 0.8mm feeler gauge back in between the throttle and the stop screw and hook up the multimeter between pins A and B. Now rotate the TPS slowly until the multimeter just reads and open circuit (or hoops between open and very high resistance). Now redo 1 to 3 and see if they are in range.
Repeat step four as many time has you need to to either get it in range or decide its .
The distilled version of all this would be
Pins on TPS are A to D bottom to top
Pin Pair resistance
A and D 3.5 to 3 k ohms
A and C (idle) 0.3 to 2 k ohms
A and C (WOT) 2 to 6.5 k ohms
A and B (0.5mm off idle) 0 to 500 ohms
A and B (0.8mm off idle) open circuit
I dont know if a dodgy IAC valve could case problems but if you unplug it and check the resistance between the two pins you should get between 11 and 14 ohms.
If anyone want to make any corrections feel free, I am working from haynes here.
Last edited by PCRman on Wed Mar 31, 2010 9:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
Give a man a fire and he's warm for the day, but set fire to him and he's warm for the rest of his life
'02 NM GLS 3.2DID ARB bar Bushskinz steps Rhino bars front air locker OME susp 265/75R16 AT's
'02 NM GLS 3.2DID ARB bar Bushskinz steps Rhino bars front air locker OME susp 265/75R16 AT's
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