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Thread: 95 LT1 Erratic voltages EEhack

  1. #1
    Electronic Ignition!
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    95 LT1 Erratic voltages EEhack

    I just swapped a 96 Camaro to an obd1 pcm so I can use EEhack and Tunerpro. I was doing a quick datalog, and wanted to do a power balance test. The power balance test wont run because the TPS voltage is bouncing erratically from .4 to .8 which is in the acceptable range, but it thinks there is constantly fluctuating throttle between 0-4%. I noticed multiple other sensor bouncing erratically. I know 3 or 4 of them share a pcm ground.
    My first assumption is a ground issue on the car, but before i go hunting and checking all the grounds wanted to see if it may be a signal issue, or if someone had run into this before.
    Also the laptop was not plugged into a power source.

  2. #2
    LT1 specialist steveo's Avatar
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    pull the belt and try again to prove your alternator rectifier isnt shot.
    the tps should be dead on consistent
    if it still does it, you have a shoddy ground, or maybe extreme rfi from an arcing plug wire or something?

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by steveo View Post
    pull the belt and try again to prove your alternator rectifier isnt shot.
    the tps should be dead on consistent
    if it still does it, you have a shoddy ground, or maybe extreme rfi from an arcing plug wire or something?
    Thanks I'll try that

  4. #4
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    I pulled the alternator and its connectors. No change.

    So the issue is I have erratic signal from many sensors. The obvious ones are map, tps, a/c pressure, ect, iat and ac evap temp. It will even do it with key on engine off. They dont swing far but swing a couple degrees or percentages always. I noticed the negative battery terminal was a little loose. I tightened it up and it helped a little. I checked the main lug on pass side strut tower and cleaned it up, I found a couple broken grounds at the coil. I may have broken them though in dissassembly. Im going to repair those grounds, but even with them off, I still get the erratic signals.
    I also unplugged pretty much every sensor or actuator I could find and checked one at a time to see if something was backfeeding. No change. In fact when the erratic sensors are unplugged they remain erratic, just at a different reading.

    Didnt have time to get under car and check the grounds on the bottom. Will do that when I repair the grounds on the coil.
    Also havent check for an arcing plug wire, I will but I think it might be unlikely because the wires are relatively new and the vehicle runs very well.
    Anything else to check out when I get back to it?

  5. #5
    Fuel Injected!
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    Sounds like the reference ground for the PCM itself is floating if unplugging the sensors doesn't resolve the fluctuation.
    1990 Corvette (Manual)
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    1995 Corvette (Manual)

  6. #6
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    Thats what Ive figured but the PCM ground is accessible from under the car, and I worked in the rain as long as I could stand. Waiting for a dry day to get under it.

  7. #7
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    Cleaned up the engine grounds today. Didnt change it. Still does it key on engine off.

    Screenshot of datalog KOEO


    \



    Any other recommendations would be greatly appreciated

  8. #8
    Fuel Injected! MO LS Noobie's Avatar
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    With everything plugged in, key on but engine does not need to be running, and the voltage fluctuating attach a accurate voltmeter to the negative battery terminal and the positive lead to the grounds at the PCM. This is called a voltage drop test. If you have a fluctuating reading of even 0.010 volt you have a bad ground condition that needs to be cleaned up. Do not forget the negative battery to body grounds, Maine ground to engine block, and engine block to grounds.

    If you're voltage drop test of the negative side is okay, it must be an internal PCM problem, not likely the only other suspect. Good luck

  9. #9
    LT1 specialist steveo's Avatar
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    other stuff can cause this, like corrosion in the key switch contacts or fuse block it's a really old car. go through everything.

  10. #10
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    Not excited about this. Tried grounding PCM straight to lug on right fender. No change. TPS doesn't act up until engine is running, everything else fluctuates KOEO including AC Pressure, ect, o2s, map and I think a couple others.

    Currently chasing circuits from PCM to ground.

  11. #11
    LT1 specialist steveo's Avatar
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    weird. im not excited for you either. can you post an eehack log of key on engine off for like 20 seconds?

    here's your ecm wiring http://shbox.com/1/4th_gen_tech2.html#1995_pcm_pinouts

    briefly how it works, the ECM actually expects noisy power and ground input.

    things labelled 'sensor ground' are the ecm filtered grounds, they are not connected directly to chassis ground but have internal filtering. they're solid black.

    then there's the 5v reference voltage wires, they're solid grey, they spit out a cleaned up 5 volts

    even with fluctuating input voltage or a bit of ground noise, you should get fairly solid 5v out and that's what your TPS etc use

    if you want to verify your harness you need to disconnect your ecm and all sensors and start probing things... actually isn't hard but i would test with like a 5 amp load, that way if you have a splice that's on the way out, it'll burn it the hell out so you can find it.

  12. #12
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    Here is a ~20 second datalog. Key on engine off. Without the additional ground strap to PCM i used for testing, all oe engine grounds are connected.

    https://filebin.net/jikd6uiffaxaries

  13. #13
    LT1 specialist steveo's Avatar
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    okay yeah you have major issues. i would suspect something on the power side because there are multiple redundant grounds that would have to fail for this to be so bad.

    look at your ECM input voltage, it's unstable and way below 12v. a resting vehicle with a good battery would be 12.5v. every connection is suspect, you will just have to isolate the issue.

  14. #14
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    Any recommendations on where to start, or what to look for. I'm not much of an electrical guy, and most of the diagnosis I have done has been limited to ground side and just making sure voltage is getting to things, more indepth than that and I'm a little out of my depth.

  15. #15
    LT1 specialist steveo's Avatar
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    - not an electrical guy
    - almost 30 year old fuel injected car

    you must change one of the above things

    honestly you might just try keeping the logger running running a graph in eehack and start wiggling wires and connectors until something changes. you gotta start somewhere...and something is very broken

    also a big long power jumper wire might be helpful. you want to focus on the PCM IGN circuit, if you can find a place to jack power into that wire that fixes the problem you can move backwards from there to find the fault.

    everything is suspect, gm really cheaped out on the wiring in these cars. the harness runs to the passenger footwell to some connectors and the body control module, and continues to under the dash where it connects to your fuse panel, ignition switch, etc.

    look for anything that's been previously repaired first.

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