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#11
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Throttle Position Sensor went out...OUCH!
delbert brecht wrote:
> jim beam4/8/08 t > >> SHRED wrote: >>> 2002 CR-V >>> 78233 miles >>> California >>> >>> Throttle position sensor went out so the whole throttle body needed >>> replacement. They can't replace just the sensor. >>> Total cost: $1000.00. >>> >>> American Honda just called and are going to "review" for possible >>> "goodwill" coverage. The representative didn't sound to encouraging. >>> >>> I have the TSB 04-008 which admits to a defective part. >>> http://www.in.honda.com/Rjanisis/pubs/SB/A04-008.PDF >>> >>> This is so frustrating. >>> I have owned, and my family has owned, Honda for decades. 2 of our 3 >>> vehicles are Honda. >>> >>> This thousand dollar bill is souring me to Honda big time. >>> It would be a shame for Honda to lose me over this. >>> >>> Any advice here? >>> >>> >>> --- >> 1. don't pay attention to trolls. >> 2. shop around. the part costs $571 from hondaautomotiveparts.com. you >> could replace it yourself. >> 3. shop around some more. afaict, honda use a limited number of tps >> designs, and it's easy enough to get another one from a junk yard. >> >> if you find one and fit it, be aware that the reason honda say to >> replace the whole thing is sensor calibration. but that shouldn't be >> too hard to do yourself. here's how to do it: take a small [fresh] >> battery, say 1.5v or 3v, and connect it so the battery is between the >> two outer connectors on the tps output - they connect to the resistor >> track. then measure precisely the voltage between the middle one >> relative to both the outers. the sum of the two should be exactly the >> battery voltage when connected. it should be roughly 0.15v relative to >> zero if the battery is 1.5v. again, measure this precisely with a dvm. >> now, after fitting the "new" [or repaired, which is also possible in >> my experience] sensor, position the sensor so that it now replicates the >> exact same voltages with the throttle in the same position. >> >> now you have a calibrated tps and you can drive again! usually, the >> sensors fail at a point on the track where the throttle most commonly >> sits when driving, but it's ok at the idle position so you can do this >> measure/calibrate procedure. >> >> oh, and honda usually use shear head bolts to hold the tps on. those >> will unscrew if you carefully use a chisel, or even a reverse helix drill. > Jim > > I understood most of what you said about calibrating the TP sensor but got > just a little fuzzy on this sentence. > >> it should be roughly 0.15v relative to zero if the battery is 1.5v. > > Did you mean 0.15 volts? Or was it a typo? no, zero point one five. or approx 1/10th of the total voltage. > If you could explain it again it > would be very helpful. just like a potentiometer used in electronics, the throttle position sensor is a resistor laid in a circular track, and a centrally mounted brush contacts the track at a position that you can set, in this case by moving the throttle. on my 89 civic, 5V is applied across the resistor and the contact can therefore tap in at any point in between - half way being 2.500V, 1/3 being 1.667V, etc. if you measure the voltage on the contact on the old tps, then replicate it with the new tps, without adjusting anything else on the throttle body, it should be calibrated as before. i suggest using a low voltage power source doing this with the throttle body off the car because higher voltage than factory might burn the resistor. and you're after the differential, not an absolute value. > This is potentially a real money saver for people > with this problem on an out of warranty repair. or it's fun to do if you're a geek with the tools and inclination. > I understood the rest of it. > I have used reverse bits to remove studs and shear bolts before and it works > pretty well if you drill a small diameter pilot hole in the exact center of > the broken stud or bolt. Have even done very small bolts like the ones that > hold on the distributor cap. It was a lot cheaper than buying a new > distributor but it requires a steady hand and the patience of Job. > > Where did you learn how to do this? I can't believe Honda put it in a > service manual. well, i got the idea from the service manual. the tps fault finding page has a graph of voltages and throttle position, and it shows idle as "0.5V", and 5V is the system voltage, so 10% is the place to start looking, with actual number being the result of calibration. everything else in the replacement process just depends on how many toys you have! you can fudge a repair on the tps itself as well, but my advice is replace it if you can find a suitable donor since actual repair is a pita. |
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#12
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Throttle Position Sensor went out...OUCH!
On Apr 9, 9:15 pm, SHRED > wrote:
> ACAR wrote: > > On Apr 8, 4:41 pm, SHRED > wrote: > >> 2002 CR-V > >> 78233 miles > >> California > > > snip > >> This thousand dollar bill is souring me to Honda big time. > >> It would be a shame for Honda to lose me over this. > > >> Any advice here? > > >> --- > > > One expensive repair in 8 years and 80K miles and you're ready to give > > up on Honda? > > The fact is that in the TSB, Honda admits to a "defect in manufacturing". > I am perfectly willing to accept legitimate expenses but when the part > in question is a known defect then why should the consumer be held liable? > Hummm??? I had to replace fuel injectors and a clutch slave cylinder in Acuras and an idle air control valve in a Toyota; all of these were covered under various TSBs. Yeah, the manufacturers sometimes get it wrong. Of course, none of these parts failed within the warranty period. Just like your TPS. Unlike your situation, I didn't get the Acura repair work done at a dealership (after asking about manufacturer support for the work, of course) so my repair cost was lower. The Toyota repair was partially covered by Toyota but the part had relatively few miles on it. Re. Honda support: try to speak directly with the district or regional manager. They've got lots of latitude. That's how I got Toyota support. |
#13
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Throttle Position Sensor went out...OUCH!
jim beam wrote:
<SNIP> the tps fault finding > page has a graph of voltages and throttle position, and it shows idle as > "0.5V", and 5V is the system voltage, so 10% is the place to start > looking, with actual number being the result of calibration. everything > else in the replacement process just depends on how many toys you have! > you can fudge a repair on the tps itself as well, but my advice is > replace it if you can find a suitable donor since actual repair is a pita. ------------------- I wonder what a wrecking yard would charge for a throttle body ? Maybe $200 - $250 ? Takes about 8 minutes to remove it yourself, especially off a wreck.... Of course you'd want to replace the gaskets with OEM, but it wouldn't even need to be calibrated, just do the 'idle learn' procedure, which is documented all over the place at www.hondasuv.com. 'Curly' |
#14
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Throttle Position Sensor went out...OUCH!
"motsco_" > wrote
> I wonder what a wrecking yard would charge for a throttle > body ? Maybe $200 - $250 ? www.upullandpay.com has several wrecking sites nationwide. They advertise the price of basic parts online for several of its locations. A throttle body goes for about $22. Bring the core and get about $3 back on that. Factor in a couple bucks for admission. The one local to me is great. Prices online are what the site has. Wrecking yards where a person does not get to do their own pulling tend to charge a lot more, in my experience. |
#15
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Throttle Position Sensor went out...OUCH!
Elle wrote:
> "motsco_" > wrote >> I wonder what a wrecking yard would charge for a throttle >> body ? Maybe $200 - $250 ? > > www.upullandpay.com has several wrecking sites nationwide. > They advertise the price of basic parts online for several > of its locations. A throttle body goes for about $22. Bring > the core and get about $3 back on that. Factor in a couple > bucks for admission. > > The one local to me is great. Prices online are what the > site has. > > Wrecking yards where a person does not get to do their own > pulling tend to charge a lot more, in my experience. and experience is what you gain from most. if you pull your own part, chances are that when it comes to your own vehicle, there's no more learning curve - any mistakes were made on the junk vehicle. all this for the price of admission. absolute bargain. |
#16
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Throttle Position Sensor went out...OUCH!
ACAR wrote:
> > Re. Honda support: try to speak directly with the district or regional > manager. They've got lots of latitude. That's how I got Toyota > support. Thanks for that tip! |
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