Chevyguy
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Sep 10, 2012
- Posts
- 186
- Reaction score
- 60
- Location
- Eugene,OR
- First Name
- Clayton
- Truck Year
- 1987
- Truck Model
- V20
- Engine Size
- 5.7 Litre
Charlie, check the CST by removing the wire connector and probing the sensor terminals with a multimeter set on OHMS. At 210 degrees F. You should show 185 OHMS. If it's higher your sensor is bad. Download the Driveability and emissions manual that's been stickied in one of the forums, I forget which one. If your CST wire connector look's like it's seen better day's replace it too. Check your grounds at that front stud that's right by it also. I believe the ECM is grounded to it.Hey Chevyguy, thank you. I have a spare TPS, i will just replace and see what happens. Are you saying the backward battery incident damaged the Oxygen sensor, or that was a separate issue? My O2 sensor is the single wire, which i assume works by varying resistance, and I don't think that there is any current to it when the ignition is off. i actually never did hook up the battery backwards, when i was about to hook up the second cable it gave me a major spark that is as far as that went. My alternator survived as well.
Vince, sorry for the excessive ignorance, i cannot figure out what you mean by checking CTS voltage
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