Marky Dissod
Full Access Member
Not yet, but I'm about to take it off the engine, take the IAC motor & throttle sensor off, and clean the ever-lovin schidt out of everything thrice.
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his has a IAC idle air control valve, which is what controls the idle primarily mechanically anyway, the 00-02 had them with drive by cable, previous years probably did as well as egr, in 03 they went to drive by wire with a fully electronic idle control (single piece unit),What about the TPS ? Throttle position sensor??? maybe that could cause this.
Cold starts require a rich fuel mixture (aka choked). You may not be old enough to remember carburetors and automatic chokes and before them manual chokes. In fuel injection to obtain a "choked" condition the on time is just increased on the injectors. In carbs they just mechanically shut the butterflies until the engine warmed up.You may very well be right. Although I've never understood why, 'arctic' cold starts correlate with higher RpM starts.
If the engine somehow thinks it's even colder than it actually is, that could be one possible explanation.
I'll find a mech to provide me with the temp sensors' readings later this week.
Hoping for @rockola1971 's counsel.
Not trying to be THAT guy, but the more likely culprit would be that the pintle is restricted from closing quick enough after start up. With the added fuel of the cold start enrichment based off the coolant temp adder, the truck would rev high if the pintle was stuck more so outwards away from the seat, than in. It's easy to get that backwards if you picture the the airflow working like a carb by increasing the venturi draw on the nozzle by restricting air flow. In the case of efi, they are two independent functions, so you add more idle air to go along with the extra fuel added via the injector enrichment.Cold starts require a rich fuel mixture (aka choked). You may not be old enough to remember carburetors and automatic chokes and before them manual chokes. In fuel injection to obtain a "choked" condition the on time is just increased on the injectors. In carbs they just mechanically shut the butterflies until the engine warmed up.
I would pull your IAC and see if the pintle is caked with carbon deposits. Large chunks can get wedged behind the pintle which doesnt allow the pintle to fully travel retracted. Brake cleaner instantly dissolves this carbon. LS engines are notorious for intake manifold gasket leaks so spray around the manifold sealing areas with ether or the like and see if idle jumps. If it does then you found the leak. A bad engine coolant temp sensor could cause your problem too. If PCM doesnt see the engine warming up it will try to run in choke mode too long.
The carbon restricts or completely stops the pintle from moving depending on where it gets wedged. It can wedge between the pintle and the inner bore of the IAC or behind or in front of the pintle reducing or completely stopping any movement inward and outward. This was a very common problem in the 2.8 V6 engine years ago. And high idle or rough idle was the symptom.Not trying to be THAT guy, but the more likely culprit would be that the pintle is restricted from closing quick enough after start up. With the added fuel of the cold start enrichment based off the coolant temp adder, the truck would rev high if the pintle was stuck more so outwards away from the seat, than in. It's easy to get that backwards if you picture the the airflow working like a carb by increasing the venturi draw on the nozzle by restricting air flow. In the case of efi, they are two independent functions, so you add more idle air to go along with the extra fuel added via the injector enrichment.
Stipulating to posts 28 , 29 , and 30.
For the record:
a new IAC motor made no difference
the smoke-leak test that found no leaks was done with the engine warmed up, and the OE factory intake between the airbox and the throttle body removed
I'm PERFECTLY WILLING to fire the parts derringer (as in cheaper than the parts cannon) at an '02 vehicle, several times in fact.
What pieces / hoses of plastic / rubber would you replace on a 22 year old vehicle if you were a pragmatic pessimist?
Please understand: I'd be willing to pay for a diagnostic AGAIN, IF it would actually find and fix the problem.
But after spending $150 on a diagnostic session that came up with nothing, why NOT fire the parts derringer judiciously?
For at least a week, no access to live real time data.Do you have or have access to a scanner that will show live / real time data?
Did you clean the TB yet?
Absolutely. In this case it's possible it isn't able to go from its more open while cranking position, to less open right after it fires. It should never be open enough to flair to 2500 if the tune is stock though. On some gnarly vehicles I like to make them crack ******* cold starts and hop up to like 1500 for a couple seconds before settling down, but a stock truck wont have that parked position. Unless when it's warm the truck has an issue that causes the iac to be much more open than normal, then when he shuts it down and it cools, it sticks in the much more open position.The carbon restricts or completely stops the pintle from moving depending on where it gets wedged. It can wedge between the pintle and the inner bore of the IAC or behind or in front of the pintle reducing or completely stopping any movement inward and outward. This was a very common problem in the 2.8 V6 engine years ago. And high idle or rough idle was the symptom.
For at least a week, no access to live real time data.
As for cleaning the throttle body, and advice on what to use and how to use it?
Got several cans of brake cleaner, but want to be SURE it's safe to use on a throttle body / IAC motor / throttle position sensor.
For at least a week, no access to live real time data.
As for cleaning the throttle body, and advice on what to use and how to use it?
Got several cans of brake cleaner, but want to be SURE it's safe to use on a throttle body / IAC motor / throttle position sensor.
Oh, and tps as well to make sure there isn't something wrong with it and it's showing more than 2 percent throttle at idle. If it is reporting more than 2 percent, it will kick it to the part throttle timing map which has higher timing and also throttle adders via the iac that will hang the idle.Like others have said, you need to get a scanner on it. At warmed up temp you want to see the short and long term fuel trims, the IAC duty cycle, the engine and air intake Temps, and the rpms. There are others that can help further, but those are the important ones to get it almost for sure figured out if you post the info.