Originally Posted by
BenFenner
Mechanism #4) IACV - Air Regulator also known as AICV (Auxiliary Idle Control Valve) or Cold Idle Valve. It is open when the valve is cold, and slowly closes as the valve warms up from the incoming air and from an internal electric heater. It should close completely when warm. It accomplishes this with a bi-metal strip. This is a stand-alone assembly. It can be found by the firewall below or behind the intake manifold.
More: http://www.sr20-forum.com/600784-post18.html
I'm wanting to know this for sure because I'm installing an O2 induction IM and would like to re-incorporate the AAC.
This is very important and seems to be lost on a few people. All of these idle controls are in "parallel" and none of them are in series. None of them control the amount of air going to another control. They are all independent. It may not look like it when you first view the air passageways, but they are all independent.
*simplified idle air passageways diagram goes here*
Do you know how this is routed? I looked at my IM and it seems that this goes from an opening (non-vacuum) going into the IM 'passage' which then goes to this AAC and then to the IM..so in other words it looks like:
Intake piping -> Closed pathway through IM -> AAC -> IM
So I think the AAC simply lets air from the intake piping into the IM when the throttle is closed. It looks like the AAC connects between the two vacuum ports on the IM but I don't think that's accurate, I think the AAC only connects directly into the plenum once, not twice and the other end connects into the intake piping via a closed path inside the IM.