Yep Ian.. I think your Air Regulator fine..
Air Regular Operation sequence...
The Air Regulator unit is like a backwards thermostat, as it closes with the presence of heat. Then it slowly reopens when completely cold again. Secondly, the Air Regulator is only used by the ECU with a completely cold engine.
- So when you start a cold engine, the engine is cold and the Air Regulator is open (due to lack of heat). This allows extra air into the intake and the idle increases which is desired with a cold engine.
- After starting, the ECU sends power to the Air Regulator. If the RPM increases, it will continue providing power to the Air Regulator for 90 seconds. This powers the Air Regulator circuit which heats the valve causing it to close slowly over 90 seconds. The idle is also being regulated by the ECU using the AAC value whenever the engine is running.
- Second scenerio, engine started and the RPM does NOT increase (Air Regulator is closed). ECU still sends power to the Air Regulator but only for 5 seconds which causes the Air Regular to heat up and completely close if its only open a small sliver... Thus with a warm engine, the Air Regulator is not used. All warm/hot engine idling is controlled by ECU using only the AAC valve.
Bad Air Regulator symptoms:
- If stuck open, you have unmetered air going to the intake always and the ECU cant adjust the idle down using the AAC; giving you a high idle always.
- If stuck closed (like both of ours cars), you dont have enough air during startup, the idle stumbles & chokes, and finally engine dies suddenly.
When I tested my unit, I put the unit in the freezer for an hour or so. The strip opens from the cold. Then, I added power to the terminals using a 9-volt square radio battery. This closed the Air Regular strip after about 45 seconds. It stays shut but will completely open again if I put it in the freezer again for an hour or so...
Your Air Regular maybe sticking a little bit but I doubt it.
To Clean the unit:
- Spray Throttle body cleaner on the closed strip and let dry.
- Freeze it for a couple of hours until its open completely. (but dont lay this filthy unit on your frozen food )
- Remove from freezer and Clean it throughly with Throttle body cleaner. Apply 9-volt radio battery power and spray the crap out of it as the door closes..
This process will remove all of the oily residue and will insure smooth operation.
(Remember, you can activate any 12 volt circuit with a 9-volt radio battery, to safely test it without the fear of damaging the unit; this includes all relays, switches, solenoids, etc.)
Hopefully, you didnt damage the valve strip by forcing it open with a screwdriver..
The coil spring is heat actived and not spring activated.. Damn Ian.. eek....
Why did you only test term B for olm on the Air Regulator? The Air Regulator ohm test is using both terminals seeking a good ohm value of 70-80 ohms.. This is why I think your unit is fine: 71 ohms.
Air Regular Operation sequence...
The Air Regulator unit is like a backwards thermostat, as it closes with the presence of heat. Then it slowly reopens when completely cold again. Secondly, the Air Regulator is only used by the ECU with a completely cold engine.
- So when you start a cold engine, the engine is cold and the Air Regulator is open (due to lack of heat). This allows extra air into the intake and the idle increases which is desired with a cold engine.
- After starting, the ECU sends power to the Air Regulator. If the RPM increases, it will continue providing power to the Air Regulator for 90 seconds. This powers the Air Regulator circuit which heats the valve causing it to close slowly over 90 seconds. The idle is also being regulated by the ECU using the AAC value whenever the engine is running.
- Second scenerio, engine started and the RPM does NOT increase (Air Regulator is closed). ECU still sends power to the Air Regulator but only for 5 seconds which causes the Air Regular to heat up and completely close if its only open a small sliver... Thus with a warm engine, the Air Regulator is not used. All warm/hot engine idling is controlled by ECU using only the AAC valve.
Bad Air Regulator symptoms:
- If stuck open, you have unmetered air going to the intake always and the ECU cant adjust the idle down using the AAC; giving you a high idle always.
- If stuck closed (like both of ours cars), you dont have enough air during startup, the idle stumbles & chokes, and finally engine dies suddenly.
When I tested my unit, I put the unit in the freezer for an hour or so. The strip opens from the cold. Then, I added power to the terminals using a 9-volt square radio battery. This closed the Air Regular strip after about 45 seconds. It stays shut but will completely open again if I put it in the freezer again for an hour or so...
Your Air Regular maybe sticking a little bit but I doubt it.
To Clean the unit:
- Spray Throttle body cleaner on the closed strip and let dry.
- Freeze it for a couple of hours until its open completely. (but dont lay this filthy unit on your frozen food )
- Remove from freezer and Clean it throughly with Throttle body cleaner. Apply 9-volt radio battery power and spray the crap out of it as the door closes..
This process will remove all of the oily residue and will insure smooth operation.
(Remember, you can activate any 12 volt circuit with a 9-volt radio battery, to safely test it without the fear of damaging the unit; this includes all relays, switches, solenoids, etc.)
Hopefully, you didnt damage the valve strip by forcing it open with a screwdriver..
The coil spring is heat actived and not spring activated.. Damn Ian.. eek....
Why did you only test term B for olm on the Air Regulator? The Air Regulator ohm test is using both terminals seeking a good ohm value of 70-80 ohms.. This is why I think your unit is fine: 71 ohms.