You have a air/fuel meter? Why do you think the afm is reading wrong?
Without knowing what your air fuel ratio is you really can't adjust it. I've read to just buy another one. I bought 3 from a junkyard for 5 bucks a peice.
just use the idle adjustment on the throttle body. afm/maf just tell the computer how much air is being pulled into for timing and injector pulses. at least to the best of my knowledge, theres not much you can adjust if anything on a afm. maf you cant adjust it, i know that one.
Mine has a flap inside and if you take the black cover off the top there is a black plastic gear with the number 500 on it every 15-20 teeth it is hooked to a metal bar that runs over a metal stip floats actually and i can adjust it so the starti g position of the flap is different
I also found that if i make the starting position near closed i get low acceleration if i put it say halfway i can get 0-60 in like 4-5 sec rather then 7
You have got a VAF that is easy to adjust on a Dyno
Run it a WOT @ 4000 RPM and get somebody to turn the plastic gear (with its stop temporarily removed) to read about 13.2 AFR or 3 to 3.5 CO then arrest the gear again :bigpimp:
I am sure the manual (which fits in 3 ring binders) also tells you something, should you not be able to do it the way I usually do it.
MAP sensor measures maniold vacuum and is best tuned with a Unichip
MAF sensors are the best :thumbup: as they measure the actual air mass entering the engine. These can be "tuned" with some shunt resistors, should you not be able to afford a Unichip.
If you do not have the availiability of a Dyno, you can ask somebody expandable to kneel on the fender whilst you floor it down the road in 4'th & :rofl:
I know I am going to get sued & I do not care as our judiciary has ground to a halt years ago :tsk:
I may be wrong but..
The screw on the afm is for air / fuel ratio at idle and should only be adjusted while monitoring air / fuel ratios
There is no idle adjustment screw on the throttle body, just a screw which controls closed position of the throttle (which sits just passed right angle to the throttle body).
The idle is controlled by the idle control valve. If you open your throttle slightly from closed you should hear the idle control switch 'click' and 'click' again when you release the throttle. That is how the car knows whether it should idle the engine.
It is not uncommon for people to adjust the screw on the throttle body thinking it is the idle screw, this is incorrect practice.
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