T O P I C R E V I E W
|
gercolla1
Member # 3068
|
posted
Hi My 91 mustang has a sticking throttle body(the accelerator becomes stuck in the closed/idle position,especially in the morning or after being parked for several hours). The TB is an edblk 70mm. The rest of the motor is basically stock, except for eql headers and pulleys and ofcourse an edblk intake.Is there a remedy or is this just a fact of life?
|
st5150
Member # 51
|
posted
Try tightening your idle screw a turn or so, and backing off your TPS a bit to offset it, then disconnecting the battery for a few seconds to reset the idle.
A 70mm TB is an overkill for stock heads and cam. [ July 14, 2003, 04:38 PM: Message edited by: st5150 ]
|
castor
Member # 2765
|
posted
don't mean to "jack" your post, but i've the similar problem still. sounds like how my car is in the morning and after sitting for a few hours. my idle in the morning goes up, then down, up, then back down and dies sometimes before warming up. i'm gonna change my O2 sensors to see if that's the problem then check the throttle.
|
gercolla1
Member # 3068
|
posted
Hey st5150, I am gonna try exactly what you suggested.However, when adjusting a tps don't I need a voltage tester or something like that? And is this done while it is running or just igintion on? Thanx!
|
cobraman_1994
Member # 467
|
posted
quote: Originally posted by castor: don't mean to "jack" your post, but i've the similar problem still. sounds like how my car is in the morning and after sitting for a few hours. my idle in the morning goes up, then down, up, then back down and dies sometimes before warming up. i'm gonna change my O2 sensors to see if that's the problem then check the throttle.
you checked for vaccume leaks right? mine used to do that and thats all it was
|
st5150
Member # 51
|
posted
quote: Originally posted by gercolla1: Hey st5150, I am gonna try exactly what you suggested.However, when adjusting a tps don't I need a voltage tester or something like that? And is this done while it is running or just igintion on? Thanx!
Yes, you'll need a volt meter:
http://www.burchbizzness.com/TPS_Adjustment_in_color.htm
Aim for about 0.85 to 0.90 volts.
|
castor
Member # 2765
|
posted
quote: Originally posted by cobraman_1994: quote: Originally posted by castor: don't mean to "jack" your post, but i've the similar problem still. sounds like how my car is in the morning and after sitting for a few hours. my idle in the morning goes up, then down, up, then back down and dies sometimes before warming up. i'm gonna change my O2 sensors to see if that's the problem then check the throttle.
you checked for vaccume leaks right? mine used to do that and thats all it was
besides trying to listen for vaccuum leaks, is there another way to check? thanks in advance!
|
jph331
Member # 665
|
posted
I noticed a lot of Edelbrock and BBK throttle bodies would stick, usually after warmed up though. Poor fit between housing and throttle blade. Accufab makes a much nicer throttle body.
|
92coupe
Member # 1957
|
posted
quote: Originally posted by st5150: quote: Originally posted by gercolla1: Hey st5150, I am gonna try exactly what you suggested.However, when adjusting a tps don't I need a voltage tester or something like that? And is this done while it is running or just igintion on? Thanx!
Yes, you'll need a volt meter:
http://www.burchbizzness.com/TPS_Adjustment_in_color.htm
Aim for about 0.85 to 0.90 volts.
i thought you wanted it .90 to .94?? atleats thats what my friend was told, or is it different for a blown car?
|
st5150
Member # 51
|
posted
Chances are your volt meter is out of calibration and not even .04 volts accurate so its not a big deal either way as long as the car idles well.
|