96 accord surging at cruise throttle
#16
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 96 accord surging at cruise throttle
MajBach wrote:
> Actually it's not that easy. As a matter of fact, yesterday I gave up
> trying to figure a way to get my mutlimeter at that unit. Changed a
> wheel bearing and my rad...which i found to be much easier.
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> If it's the TPS it's SO EASY to confirm. Get an old-style meter with a
>> needle and connect it to the TPS, set for 1,000 Ohm range. You'll see it
>> move smothely, then spike to infinity when you hit the open spot, which
>> corresponds to highway cruise RPMs. Google it and find a 'tuner' TPS
>> replacement and it will probably even come with directions how to drill
>> / Dremmel the rivets.
>>
>> 'Curly'
---------------------------------
The diagrams at www.slhondaparts.com should help. I just walked outside
and opened the hood of my CR-V. Reached behind the throttle body,
squeezed the connector and slipped it off the TPS. Without bending over
very far I can feel three pins with my finger. Put your (extension)
leads on the center one and either of the others. When you rotate the
throttle plate by hand you'll see you meter needle swing offscale when
you hit cruise speed (probably about 2,600 RPM?).
Don't use a digital meter unless it has a good analog bar graph.
The original CR-V _does_ have lots of room under the hood.
'Curly'
> Actually it's not that easy. As a matter of fact, yesterday I gave up
> trying to figure a way to get my mutlimeter at that unit. Changed a
> wheel bearing and my rad...which i found to be much easier.
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> If it's the TPS it's SO EASY to confirm. Get an old-style meter with a
>> needle and connect it to the TPS, set for 1,000 Ohm range. You'll see it
>> move smothely, then spike to infinity when you hit the open spot, which
>> corresponds to highway cruise RPMs. Google it and find a 'tuner' TPS
>> replacement and it will probably even come with directions how to drill
>> / Dremmel the rivets.
>>
>> 'Curly'
---------------------------------
The diagrams at www.slhondaparts.com should help. I just walked outside
and opened the hood of my CR-V. Reached behind the throttle body,
squeezed the connector and slipped it off the TPS. Without bending over
very far I can feel three pins with my finger. Put your (extension)
leads on the center one and either of the others. When you rotate the
throttle plate by hand you'll see you meter needle swing offscale when
you hit cruise speed (probably about 2,600 RPM?).
Don't use a digital meter unless it has a good analog bar graph.
The original CR-V _does_ have lots of room under the hood.
'Curly'
#17
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 96 accord surging at cruise throttle
MajBach wrote:
> Actually it's not that easy. As a matter of fact, yesterday I gave up
> trying to figure a way to get my mutlimeter at that unit. Changed a
> wheel bearing and my rad...which i found to be much easier.
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> If it's the TPS it's SO EASY to confirm. Get an old-style meter with a
>> needle and connect it to the TPS, set for 1,000 Ohm range. You'll see it
>> move smothely, then spike to infinity when you hit the open spot, which
>> corresponds to highway cruise RPMs. Google it and find a 'tuner' TPS
>> replacement and it will probably even come with directions how to drill
>> / Dremmel the rivets.
>>
>> 'Curly'
---------------------------------
The diagrams at www.slhondaparts.com should help. I just walked outside
and opened the hood of my CR-V. Reached behind the throttle body,
squeezed the connector and slipped it off the TPS. Without bending over
very far I can feel three pins with my finger. Put your (extension)
leads on the center one and either of the others. When you rotate the
throttle plate by hand you'll see you meter needle swing offscale when
you hit cruise speed (probably about 2,600 RPM?).
Don't use a digital meter unless it has a good analog bar graph.
The original CR-V _does_ have lots of room under the hood.
'Curly'
> Actually it's not that easy. As a matter of fact, yesterday I gave up
> trying to figure a way to get my mutlimeter at that unit. Changed a
> wheel bearing and my rad...which i found to be much easier.
>> ------------------------------
>>
>> If it's the TPS it's SO EASY to confirm. Get an old-style meter with a
>> needle and connect it to the TPS, set for 1,000 Ohm range. You'll see it
>> move smothely, then spike to infinity when you hit the open spot, which
>> corresponds to highway cruise RPMs. Google it and find a 'tuner' TPS
>> replacement and it will probably even come with directions how to drill
>> / Dremmel the rivets.
>>
>> 'Curly'
---------------------------------
The diagrams at www.slhondaparts.com should help. I just walked outside
and opened the hood of my CR-V. Reached behind the throttle body,
squeezed the connector and slipped it off the TPS. Without bending over
very far I can feel three pins with my finger. Put your (extension)
leads on the center one and either of the others. When you rotate the
throttle plate by hand you'll see you meter needle swing offscale when
you hit cruise speed (probably about 2,600 RPM?).
Don't use a digital meter unless it has a good analog bar graph.
The original CR-V _does_ have lots of room under the hood.
'Curly'
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