Tps
Tps
Tps
Our transmission controller will work with almost any throttle position sensor.
The most popular choices for adapting to carburetors are the GM throttle
position sensors with a small steel lever on the end. The lever simplifies
adaptation to carburetors, diesel injection pumps, and other applications. The
TPS kit that we sell uses a GM TPS and includes mounting brackets for a Holley
carburetor.
1. Set the meter to resistance mode and set it to a scale that can read up to 10K
or 20K Ohms (if it is not auto-ranging). Please keep in mind when setting up and
reading the meter that "K" means thousands of Ohms. In other words, 15K
Ohms is the same as 15,000 Ohms.
2. Connect the meter to two pins at a time while operating the lever or cam of
the TPS. Watch the meter while rotating the sensor. Check all three pairs of pins
until you find a pair that does not change resistance when you rotate the sensor.
The two pins that do not change resistance are the fixed ends of the resistance
element (+5V and ground). The remaining pin that did change is known as the
"wiper". It is the moving contact that slides along the resistance element to give
the varying voltage. This is the output terminal of the sensor and should be
connected to our green wire (Vehicle pin 3).
3. Next, with the sensor at the idle or closed throttle position, measure the
resistance between the wiper (output) and each of the end terminals (the two
whose resistance did not change in step 2) of the sensor. The end terminal with
the lowest resistance to the wiper (at idle) is the ground terminal, and should
connect to the black main ground wire of the TCS (Vehicle pin 16). The terminal
with the higher resistance to the wiper is the 5 volt reference input to the sensor
and should connect to the orange wire (Vehicle pin 11) in our harness.