Ecomike
NAXJA# 2091
- Location
- MilkyWay Galaxy
@Ecomike I haven't gotten a chance to do the running sensor tests yet because I had to get my butt to work and I was late... Now as for the torx idle screw... I've cranked it in all the way, closing the port. This brought the idle down at the time that I did it, but it seems to have compensated for it and is back up at the high idle. I figure it has to be either a vac leak somewhere or a sensor that is telling the computer to open up the idle air motor for some reason... I wonder if my new O2 sensor is faulty... any way to test it without expensive equipment?
Easy way to test O2 sensor for that problem is to just disconnect it. If it still idles high, it is not the O2 sensor. If the high idle stops, it may be a good working O2 sensor adjusting AF ratio and raising the idle to compensate for the vacuum leak.
http://www.naxja.org/forum/showthread.php?t=1012701&highlight=oxygen+sensor+test
http://www.naxja.org/forum/search.php?searchid=4018847
You can take some pliers and bend the ear that rests on the idle stop screw on the throttle body, or use the idle stop screw that the ear rests on to adjust it. The idle stop screw on mine was seized, so I just bent the ear. I would open the torx screw back to where it was, then try adjusting the idle stop ear or screw, maybe adjust both, but you want some air going through the torx screw hole on the throttle body, you do not want it closed all the way.
Do you have the proper size orifice restrictor in the small tube line that goes to the rear of the valve cover and to the intake manifold. If it is too large, it will act like a vacuum leak and cause a high idle.
An idle that only rises with increasing engine temp is usually a stuck IAC, a manifold gasket leak, or a bad temp sensor.