Hey, that's a good way to do it, thanks for the tip!bigaaron said:On a 1jz the timing will only be at 10 degrees (with E1 and TE1 jumpered) when the throttle is fully closed, so to adjust the tps you can use a timing light, and make sure the timing changes with just a slight blip of the throttle. You don't have to have it at exactly precisely .4mm for it to work correctly, but it does need to change with a slight movement of the throttle. With the throttle closed, turn the tps until you see the timing jump up (it will be about 18 deg), then turn it the opposite way just untill the timing goes back down to 10. Then turn the throttle and a slight movement should make the timing jump up. The correct way to do it is with a volt meter and feeler gauge, but this way can be done with just a timing light and a screw driver.
bigaaron;592508 said:On a 1jz the timing will only be at 10 degrees (with E1 and TE1 jumpered) when the throttle is fully closed, so to adjust the tps you can use a timing light, and make sure the timing changes with just a slight blip of the throttle. You don't have to have it at exactly precisely .4mm for it to work correctly, but it does need to change with a slight movement of the throttle. With the throttle closed, turn the tps until you see the timing jump up (it will be about 18 deg), then turn it the opposite way just untill the timing goes back down to 10. Then turn the throttle and a slight movement should make the timing jump up. The correct way to do it is with a volt meter and feeler gauge, but this way can be done with just a timing light and a screw driver.
annoyingrob said:To adjust it, stick a continuity meter across VE and IDL (I think those are the pins), stick a 0.4mm (not a 0.6mm like the 2JZ) spacer between the throttle adjustment screw, and the stop on the throttle, then adjust the TPS so it JUST reaches continuity. Then double check that <0.4mm has continuity, and >0.4mm doesn't. It's VERY tricky to get right, and may take you a couple tries.
bigaaron said:On a 1jz the timing will only be at 10 degrees (with E1 and TE1 jumpered) when the throttle is fully closed, so to adjust the tps you can use a timing light, and make sure the timing changes with just a slight blip of the throttle. You don't have to have it at exactly precisely .4mm for it to work correctly, but it does need to change with a slight movement of the throttle. With the throttle closed, turn the tps until you see the timing jump up (it will be about 18 deg), then turn it the opposite way just untill the timing goes back down to 10. Then turn the throttle and a slight movement should make the timing jump up. The correct way to do it is with a volt meter and feeler gauge, but this way can be done with just a timing light and a screw driver.
greendi_rosa said:the ignitor has a wire that is folded up underneath the cover, it just pulls out. i can't remember the color of it though, but you'll be able to tell