Jamie,
Well that was fun! lol
The OEM clamps are tough to get off, but possible.
Johann was correct with all of the info. I did not disconnect the battery...forgot.
The toughest bit was putting back the rear bolt on the bracket...no room, and if dropped, engine cover off time, but I was careful and it paid off. no engine pan removal required.
The hose from the value going to the manifold came off with a bit of a twist and pull, not as hard as I thought.
Replaced all of the hose clamps with worm gear type. I believe they were 1.5" dia.
The valve was DIRTY, as were all of the hoses and the plastic right angle pipe. All cleaned up easily with MAF cleaner.
I misunderstood the DIY when it said do not use MAF cleaner on the short hose, and thought it meant to not get MAF cleaner into the outlet side of the valve. It soon became evident when I sprayed MAF cleaner into the "vane" side of the valve and it poured out of the other side. Oh well, it isn't the first time that I have misunderstood instructions.
Anyway, I put it all back together and turned the key.
"CHECK ENGINE" came on and she died after a second or two and would not restart.
I checked the electrical connections for the valve, TPS and MAF by pushing them all in.
Tried again after 5 minutes and she started right up.????
As I was removing electrical connectors in the dis-assembly phase, I noticed that ALL of the boots were brittle and had some cracks. Plastic after all the heat and years is on its' way out. Be aware.
Went for a run, up to operating temp, pulled to the side of the road to let her idle.
I would say that she still hunts, but only a needle width instead of about 100 rpm.
She seems to be smoother, but the engine still has a slight movement, but she has been this way for so long, it is hard to say if this fix has brought her back to stock. If I has to guess, I would say it is 80% better. I will take my 13 year old out for a drive tomorrow and see what he says.
<b>I am pleased, and would recommend that we all clean out the idle stabilizer valve due to the amount of air that has gone through it by now. </b>
With the DIY from Johann and lots of light, this should take about an hour with minimum tools and talent, just go slow and don't drop anything! Thanks Johann for the excellent DIY, I don't know how you got some of those pics, your camera is obviously smaller than my head.
Brian