English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

7 answers

I have a galant and mine does the same thing. They tought it was the vacuum and they replaed that and nothing was fixed. Now they tell me it is the idol air control sensor. The part is outragious. They told me it doesn't really hurt the car, it will probably use more gas though and be very annoying when you are idoling in park.

2007-01-28 15:28:15 · answer #1 · answered by missjuly15 2 · 0 0

it is not the TPS or throttle position sensor.

it is the Idle/air Control Sensor. Known as the ICS motor. This is a common problem among eagle talon's and mitsubishi eclipse from 1990 - 1999.

2007-01-28 15:31:30 · answer #2 · answered by mastermind 2 · 0 0

I dont think of lemon regulations could help you right here. they only conceal particular issues that bypass incorrect on a vehicle. i think of you had yet another difficulty different than a cv axle. If the vehicle sank to one million area then it is easily no longer in user-friendly terms the cv axle. You had a suspension failure. Like a ball joint broke or a administration arm broke. The cv axle doesnt postpone the vehicle, its in user-friendly terms purpose is to pass action from the transmission to make the vehicle bypass. If a suspension piece broke and all of the load of the vehicle got here down on the cv axle it probable snapped it. If that's what got here approximately it o.k. might have broken the section the cv axle is going into on the transmission. The restoration bill for this, suitable case is approximately $4 hundred - $six hundred, worst case could be as much as approximately $3000, looking on if there is any transmission harm. i wish i'm incorrect in this for you.

2016-11-27 22:10:00 · answer #3 · answered by miceli 4 · 0 0

If you have no other accessories running (i.e.-A/C, blower motor, etc.) You may have a problem with your TPS (Throttle Position Sensor). Get a trouble code test run on it first to tell if it isthe TPS sensor... If it is, get a mechanic to do it. Unless you know your way around a volt-ohm meter, you won't get it right...

2007-01-27 04:17:30 · answer #4 · answered by Mark D 3 · 0 0

Could be as simple as a vacuum leak.
Loose little hose came off at intake manifold.
Look and listen for a sucking noise.

2007-01-27 04:09:49 · answer #5 · answered by Mr. KnowItAll 7 · 0 0

throttle position sensor

2007-01-27 05:54:49 · answer #6 · answered by Slyder 3 · 0 0

Is it an American Idol?

2007-01-27 04:14:14 · answer #7 · answered by nurse ratchet 6 · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers