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Old 03-26-2010, 03:46 PM   #1
Max777
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Default Using a resistor to cure high TPS resistance?

EDIT: Did the math wrong... a resistor ADDS 800 to the 7,000 ohm value, not subtracts it... doh.

-Max.



I've been mucking around with my car a little, and found out that my TPS maxes out at 7K ohms. I checked the curve with a manual volt meter, and its nice and smooth, the only problem being that it has high resistance during full throttle....

I was wondering about wiring in a 800ohm resistor to the curcuit and resetting the RPM to cure this problem? A new TPS is $220, so I would love it as a temp fix for this problem. This would put my tps at 6200 ohms at full throttle, which is alright. All I would need to do is adjust the tps if this works correctly.



-Is the resistance curve on a TPS sensor linear? Will wiring in the resistor somehow skew the curve?






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Last edited by Max777; 03-29-2010 at 02:07 AM..
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Old 03-26-2010, 09:50 PM   #2
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How where you thinking about wiring that resistor in? By my math you would need a 63kohm resistance in parallel with the tps to get 6.3kohm
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Old 03-29-2010, 02:06 AM   #3
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Hmm, I don't know what I was thinking when I posted this...I need LESS resistance up top, the resistor thing would only make it higher.

Is there any way to "magically" drop TPS resistance? Or has that technology not been invented yet?
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Old 03-29-2010, 07:06 AM   #4
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Is it possible to wire in a 'clamp' similar to to what an FCD does?
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Old 03-29-2010, 12:54 PM   #5
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probably, but an FCD is already in the price range of a good used TPS. I think I will try a used TPS and see.
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Old 03-30-2010, 08:02 AM   #6
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First, check your -voltage-. The ECU pumps +5vdc through the TPS, and reads the result. If the voltage is very high, check your TPS ground. If it's very low, check your TPS +5v wire.

Lastly, if you need to lower the resistance, take the two wires you're trying to lower resistance between and add a resistor between them. With two electrical paths to follow, resistance will drop. If you have 7k resistance and add a 7k resister bypassing the TPS, you'll get 3.5k. Google will reveal the math to calculate the exact resister to change the peak to where you want it.
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