Throttle valve R&R, 1.7 liter et al |
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Throttle valve R&R, 1.7 liter et al |
r3dplanet |
Mar 12 2013, 08:00 PM
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#1
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 679 Joined: 3-September 05 From: Portland, Oregon Member No.: 4,741 Region Association: None |
So I decided to pull the throttle body (valve) from my car in order to rebuild it. The throttle valve had a tendency to leak and stick. It was also moderately dirty. At the time I was on a personal mission to pull and restore every major component of the D-Jet system. Since then, I've performed similar operations on the MPS, AAR, etc. Perhaps I'll document those operations in a similar way.
My car is a 1971, but the engine is a 1973. I know that other engines use a top-mounted throttle valve, but it's actually quite similar to the side-mounted units like mine. I realize that this isn't superorbital propulsion engineering, but it might be helpful to somebody. Here's the original setup. You can clearly see the part number 022 133 067 under the muck, along with various scratches and nasties. In this photo you can see that there's quite a gap around the brass air valve and inner diameter of the main bore. It seals if the valve is fully closed, but even the smallest relief of the lever allows air to pass. |
r3dplanet |
Mar 12 2013, 08:14 PM
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#2
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Senior Member Group: Members Posts: 679 Joined: 3-September 05 From: Portland, Oregon Member No.: 4,741 Region Association: None |
Next, remove the idle air control valve by unscrewing the large pan-head screw. Hopefully the spring underneath isn't broken. Mine was almost frozen stuck, so I dropped in a little PB Blaster.
Moving ahead, you can now use a long thin screwdriver to release and remove the screws holding the air valve to the shaft. Mine were quite hard to break. Again, PB Blaster to the rescue. |
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