Ported TB - Overported ?
- higher idle
- lower IACs
I'm hoping I can just swap my blade out, but just a quick look suggests they cut more material from the TB than the blade. I'll check it out anyways, becuause that's gonna be a pretty easy fix if it works.
As for IACs, what will lower IACs do to the way the car runs? Will the car run leaner, or does it simply affect idle/surging issues (seems like idle/surging only, from what I've read)? Also, can the PCM learn to compensate? I've heard that you should let the car idle for 15 minutes after changing TBs to let the computer get used to the new TB. Would that solve anything, or is it more of a band-aid to the real problem?
One last thing: If I put the TB on, and have no idle issues, does that mean it's all good? Or do I have other parameters I should be worrying about as well? Thanks.
- higher idle
- lower IACs
I'm hoping I can just swap my blade out, but just a quick look suggests they cut more material from the TB than the blade. I'll check it out anyways, becuause that's gonna be a pretty easy fix if it works.
As for IACs, what will lower IACs do to the way the car runs? Will the car run leaner, or does it simply affect idle/surging issues (seems like idle/surging only, from what I've read)? Also, can the PCM learn to compensate? I've heard that you should let the car idle for 15 minutes after changing TBs to let the computer get used to the new TB. Would that solve anything, or is it more of a band-aid to the real problem?
One last thing: If I put the TB on, and have no idle issues, does that mean it's all good? Or do I have other parameters I should be worrying about as well? Thanks.
I say put it on and see what happens over the next day or so.
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BTW, if the gap is big enough to create idle issues (i.e. IAC counts drop to zero), don't panic. Close the hole in the blade with expoxy and see if that cures it.
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Thanks for the clarification on IAC steps, SSpdDmon. I'm going to try reading up more on IAC counts and what's good, bad, etc. Are there any other documents I should look at besides the stickies in the PCM Tuning forum?
BTW, is camming the car a good way to fix a low IAC count?
Last edited by Spectator; Dec 5, 2006 at 03:24 PM.
Thanks for the clarification on IAC steps, SSpdDmon. I'm going to try reading up more on IAC counts and what's good, bad, etc. Are there any other documents I should look at besides the stickies in the PCM Tuning forum?
BTW, is camming the car a good way to fix a low IAC count?

Runs perfect!
What ive done if its ported right, is take and filled in the hole in the blade itself...
Now, for an update.
Ported TB, throttle blade knife edged, half shaft, holes epoxied.
I put the ported TB on just for the heck of it, to see what would happen. I drive it around, and the idle's all over the place, usually 400-500 rpm high for a few seconds when clutching in and coasting, and holding at 1100-1200 rpm for at least 5 seconds. It then slowly crept back down to 1000 rpm or so. I threw an SES light after ~30 minutes of driving, and the idle refused to calm down.
Here were the steps I took to try and fix the problem:
I first adjusted the idle set screw to pretty much nothing and reset the PCM. This took care of the SES light, and when I fired it up, the idle stabilized nice and low. I drove it around for ~5 minutes, and it seemed fine. The car was learning to put more air in to keep the idle going, and it seemed okay.
The next morning, I take it for a spin, and I'm meeting a little resistance on the pedal when going from zero throttle to partial throttle, as if the throttle cable or the throttle blade was sticking. I figure that it may be the blade, since it seemed to stick for some reason when I turned the throttle cam by hand with the idle set screw all the way out.
I screw in the idle set screw a little bit, reset the PCM, and try again. Idle's still fine, but I still get sticking. And I can't even duplicate the sticking by turning the throttle cam by hand anymore. I keep trying this a few more times, to no avail. I even try to loosen the throttle blade screws a little bit, thinking that maybe by keeping them a little loose, it won't get stuck. Didn't help. Strange thing too, since I didn't feel this sticking with the engine off and just pressing on the gas pedal. It only stuck when actually driving. And sometimes, it would feel fine for the first few minutes, only to start sticking again the next morning.
I thought about changing the whole shaft over from my old TB, but figured I'd try switching throttle blades first, just for ***** and giggles. Put my old throttle blade on, and most of the light around the edge of the blade is gone. A sliver compared to what I had with the knife-edged blade. I turn the cam by hand, and the blade doesn't stick, even though it seems to have more material.
So I throw it on the car, reset the PCM again for the eighth time or so, and fire it up. The engine's struggling to get enough air, but it manages to stay alive. I take it around the block, and there's no sticking. Next morning, I try it out again, and there's absolutely no sticking at all. Seems fixed.
Just in case, I readjust the idle set screw to let in more air and reset the PCM one last time. I fire it up, and the engine no longer struggled for those first few seconds after a PCM reset.
I end up with a ported TB, better throttle response, no sticky throttle, but no knife-edged blade. Beats me why a stock blade with more material doesn't stick while a knife-edged blade with less material doesn't, but I won't argue with the results. I tried that knife-edged blade both ultra-tight and slightly loose, and neither made a difference.
I didn't use a scan tool to check IAC counts, and I don't know if resetting the PCM and observing how the car compensated for the idle was the proper way to do this. Let me know if that's not a logical approach.
Thanks for all the help, guys. Just glad such a simple fix did it, even if I can't explain why.




