TPS Question, Stumble when cruising |
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TPS Question, Stumble when cruising |
warrenoliver |
Aug 26 2014, 07:49 PM
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#1
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Member Group: Members Posts: 363 Joined: 11-November 06 From: McFarland, Wisconsin Member No.: 7,199 Region Association: Upper MidWest |
I have a 73, 2.0 with F.I. and points. I have been chasing down a stumble or hesitation that occurs anywhere between 2500 and 4000 RPM. This stumble or pause or whatever is similar to what I used to have before I replaced my TPS board with a new one. With the old board I had a stumble at 2800 or 2900 and was noticeable when I was trying to maintain a certain speed. The new issue is that I have an immediate stumble just as the car begins a slight deceleration like you would have when cruising at a constant speed and then you let up just slightly or like when you back off the accelerator just a bit when you begin down a slight incline at highway speed. This never happens when I am accelerating only just as it begins to decelerate.
When I took the TPS off the car to inspect and clean the board and the contacts I noticed the device that is connected to the copper fingers that slide along the contact board is fairly loose. This plastic rotor thingy rotates with the throttle and moves the fingers. The rotor thingy is very loose in the hole of the TPS body and I can wiggle it around a bit. Is this normal? Is it supposed to have much play? Do these things wear out? It was acting up again tonight as I drove home on the highway so I pulled over and unplugged the TPS and it seemed to make the hesitation or stumble go away so it seems to me like it is related to the TPS. Any ideas? I would like to keep the TPS plugged in because acceleration sucks with it disconnected. Thanks in advance for your help |
r_towle |
Aug 27 2014, 08:37 AM
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#2
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Custom Member Group: Members Posts: 24,580 Joined: 9-January 03 From: Taxachusetts Member No.: 124 Region Association: North East States |
stumble on decel may be vacuum related.
The main system that would be affected is timing... You may want to check the vacuum canister. A simple test would be to unplug the vacuum lines to the distributor and cap them so they dont leak. Drive the car and see if it happens. A slightly more difficult test, again to test that cansiter, is to remove the canister off the distributor so the advance plates move freely. Think about how old that canister is...rubber diaphram....oil in the line, rust etc.... If you are certain the plates are working fine and they snap back to rest upon decel, then maybe there is some friction in there just caused by the age of the canister. I think that when you unplug the TPS as you stated in your test, you are enriching the fuel to the motor because everything defaults to rich to prevent the motor from burning up when you have a system/part failure. Overall, it is either a vacuum leak somewhere or timing is stuck to advanced or retarded for that specific time in life. Look for those two things.. Rich |
warrenoliver |
Aug 27 2014, 05:56 PM
Post
#3
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Member Group: Members Posts: 363 Joined: 11-November 06 From: McFarland, Wisconsin Member No.: 7,199 Region Association: Upper MidWest |
stumble on decel may be vacuum related. The main system that would be affected is timing... You may want to check the vacuum canister. A simple test would be to unplug the vacuum lines to the distributor and cap them so they dont leak. Drive the car and see if it happens. A slightly more difficult test, again to test that cansiter, is to remove the canister off the distributor so the advance plates move freely. Think about how old that canister is...rubber diaphram....oil in the line, rust etc.... If you are certain the plates are working fine and they snap back to rest upon decel, then maybe there is some friction in there just caused by the age of the canister. I think that when you unplug the TPS as you stated in your test, you are enriching the fuel to the motor because everything defaults to rich to prevent the motor from burning up when you have a system/part failure. Rich, Thanks for the ideas. I will try disconnecting the vacuum cannister and see how it goes. As far as removing the cannister, so the plates can move freely - why would the advance plates move without the vacuum advance moving them? Wouldn't they be stationary? I didn't know that removing the TPS causes it to default rich, thanks for that tip. Overall, it is either a vacuum leak somewhere or timing is stuck to advanced or retarded for that specific time in life. Look for those two things.. Rich |
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