RiceeatingSHO
Travis R
Should I be able to see my secondary butterflies open up when I rev my engine at the TB? I revved it to way past 4 grand and never saw them click open. I also reach over and open them manually and never hear a difference.
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shit, if you dont hear anything take that silencer cone out! lol
The Secondaries are naturally open with no vacuum applied. When you turn the engine on, the vacuum will shut the secondaries.
When you hit ~4000rpm, the EEC will power the IMRC solenoid, shutting the vacuum off and opening the butterflies.
This is a safety/comfort feature; running air through the short runners under 4000rpm will not **** HP nearly as bad as running air through the long runners above 4000rpm will.
If you have lost vacuum (cracked line) or the IMRC solenoid is bad (between the huge vacuum boss and where the EGR would be if you don't have it on the back of the intake; it has two vacuum lines and one connector, it's not the can looking thing, that's the reservoir), the secondaries will simply always stay open.
Even with the secondaries not closing, it will only feel doggy until about 3700 rpm, then it will behave as normal.
I can send you wiring diagrams and replacement and/or troubleshooting directions if you would like. I cannot post anything possibly proprietary here for legal reasons. Hope you understand...
you mean they close up just fine now lol. its not that much of a loss, i think we killed that horse a while back
-Mitch
The Secondaries are naturally open with no vacuum applied. When you turn the engine on, the vacuum will shut the secondaries.
When you hit ~4000rpm, the EEC will power the IMRC solenoid, shutting the vacuum off and opening the butterflies.
This is a safety/comfort feature; running air through the short runners under 4000rpm will not **** HP nearly as bad as running air through the long runners above 4000rpm will.
If you have lost vacuum (cracked line) or the IMRC solenoid is bad (between the huge vacuum boss and where the EGR would be if you don't have it on the back of the intake; it has two vacuum lines and one connector, it's not the can looking thing, that's the reservoir), the secondaries will simply always stay open.
Even with the secondaries not closing, it will only feel doggy until about 3700 rpm, then it will behave as normal.
I can send you wiring diagrams and replacement and/or troubleshooting directions if you would like. I cannot post anything possibly proprietary here for legal reasons. Hope you understand...
Sorry to bump an old thread, but I'd be grateful for the diagrams and troubleshooting/replacement directions. :wave:
Same problem that the thread is about. Secondaries are not operating. They don't close when the engine starts up, so they don't re-open at high rpm.Try being a bit more specific... what exactly is the problem... its kinda hard to just come up with everything and throw it up there and guessing what you need. I have had some problems with secondaries, and alot of info, so perhaps I could help out.
Same problem that the thread is about. Secondaries are not operating. They don't close when the engine starts up, so they don't re-open at high rpm.
Yes. They're ALWAYS open. As I understand it, they're supposed to close when you start the engine and then open at high rpm.If they don't close, wouldn't that mean that they are already open?
Where is it located, and what does it look like? I have a circuit tester, I just don't know what I'm looking for.The secondary actuator solenoid is hot with 12 volts as soon as you turn on the key. It's a red wire and you can check to make sure you have that 12 volts with a VOM or a test light hooked to ground.
The other wire receives a ground (to complete the circuit and make the valve open) from the PCM at around 2950 rpms. You can also check that you are getting that ground with the same VOM or test light (this time hooked to the positive terminal of the battery).
A common problem is hooking the little U shaped vacuum hose up to the wrong ****** on the vacuum canister on the rear plenum. There is a one way valve inside that black canister, which of course only works one way. There are colored paint dots next to each ****** to help in figuring which is which. I think there is a vacuum hose routing diagram on the plastic cover over the fan shroud.
Good luck.
Tom