So I have a permanently lit electrical fault light and unresponsive throttle pedal. The error code indicates throttle pot circuit A.
Now a bit of history, for the last 5 years I've owned the car / known the previous owner, it's had an issue when ambient temperature is nearing freezing or below. Ignition on - electrical fault light lit - throttle input is ignored. Let the car warm up. Turn off and back on. Fault clears and car drives fine. Never a problem on warmer days. Previous owner replaced throttle body and pedal. Fault remained, but as it never left him or myself stuck it never bothered me.
Recently it was playing up more and more then one day threw the fault after starting with the car already up to temperature. Oh b****cks. Since then the fault has been present permanently.
I've measured both tracks resistance at 0 and 100% pedal angle:
Pin 3 1.27K - 1.7K
Pin 6 1.21k - 1.6 k .
Pretty close and I believe in spec?
Scoped the 5V supply, it remains solid irrespective of pedal position
Scoped both signals. Given the supplies are the same and the pots measured very similarly, I'd expect two almost identical signals, but no, one is half the amplitude of the other. I'd expect this if one of the pots was half the resistance of the other, but not when they both measure the same and receive the same voltage?!
I tied the two 5v supplies and two grounds together respectively in case one supply was dipping to 2.5V (they're not isolated so no problem) Clearly not as the signals remains the same...
You can see ignition on and then 0 to 100% pedal. Yellow trace is pin 3, the other pin 6.
Can anybody tell me if this is the output the ECU wants?
Edit to add I got as far as confirming continuity at the large white block connector in the fuse and relay box. Would have scoped the signal there as well but ran out of time. The connector pins and sockets showing no sign of corrosion.
Now a bit of history, for the last 5 years I've owned the car / known the previous owner, it's had an issue when ambient temperature is nearing freezing or below. Ignition on - electrical fault light lit - throttle input is ignored. Let the car warm up. Turn off and back on. Fault clears and car drives fine. Never a problem on warmer days. Previous owner replaced throttle body and pedal. Fault remained, but as it never left him or myself stuck it never bothered me.
Recently it was playing up more and more then one day threw the fault after starting with the car already up to temperature. Oh b****cks. Since then the fault has been present permanently.
I've measured both tracks resistance at 0 and 100% pedal angle:
Pin 3 1.27K - 1.7K
Pin 6 1.21k - 1.6 k .
Pretty close and I believe in spec?
Scoped the 5V supply, it remains solid irrespective of pedal position
Scoped both signals. Given the supplies are the same and the pots measured very similarly, I'd expect two almost identical signals, but no, one is half the amplitude of the other. I'd expect this if one of the pots was half the resistance of the other, but not when they both measure the same and receive the same voltage?!
I tied the two 5v supplies and two grounds together respectively in case one supply was dipping to 2.5V (they're not isolated so no problem) Clearly not as the signals remains the same...
You can see ignition on and then 0 to 100% pedal. Yellow trace is pin 3, the other pin 6.
Can anybody tell me if this is the output the ECU wants?
Edit to add I got as far as confirming continuity at the large white block connector in the fuse and relay box. Would have scoped the signal there as well but ran out of time. The connector pins and sockets showing no sign of corrosion.
Last edited: