01-22-2013, 12:53 AM
I only had time to test the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> tonight, and it appears to be working. Testing it the conventional way (stuffing the leads of an analog voltmeter into the connectors for pins 1 and 3 at the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym>) gives the typical voltage response as I open the throttle - from about 0.4 to 5V with no abrupt jumps. But when I disconnect the DME's connector, and place the voltmeter leads between sockets 53 (labeled as "Signal from throttle potentiometer" in the manual) and socket 24, which I believe is ground, turn the key to the start position, and press the throttle, I don't get any reading. I also tried it with the voltmeter's ground lead connected to a physical ground on the car, and also no response.
To clarify, I checked the manual, and I remembered wrong - there is no procedure described for reading a signal from the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> at the DME connector - it only describes how to test the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> at the sensor itself. Also, I tried testing the signal at the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> with the DME cable disconnected, and I also got no response. So, I'm not sure if the fact that I don't read any voltage at the DME connector means there's a problem with the signal going from the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> to the DME, or if the DME cable simply needs to be connected to the DME in order to read a signal from the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym>. I guess the only sure way would be to figure out which wire goes into socket 53, scrape a bit of insulation off of it, plug in the DME connector, and check for a voltage signal. I'd prefer to avoid potentially destructive tests like this, though, unless there is no alternative.
To clarify, I checked the manual, and I remembered wrong - there is no procedure described for reading a signal from the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> at the DME connector - it only describes how to test the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> at the sensor itself. Also, I tried testing the signal at the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> with the DME cable disconnected, and I also got no response. So, I'm not sure if the fact that I don't read any voltage at the DME connector means there's a problem with the signal going from the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym> to the DME, or if the DME cable simply needs to be connected to the DME in order to read a signal from the <acronym title='throttle position sensor'>TPS</acronym>. I guess the only sure way would be to figure out which wire goes into socket 53, scrape a bit of insulation off of it, plug in the DME connector, and check for a voltage signal. I'd prefer to avoid potentially destructive tests like this, though, unless there is no alternative.

