90 Accord hard starting

Discussion in 'Accord' started by Kevin in Iowa, Sep 8, 2005.

  1. Kevin in Iowa

    TeGGeR® Guest

    This is inside the cabin and well protected. Never seen one die.[/QUOTE]


    You sure it's in the cabin?


    Mine is mounted on a bracket on the firewall, with a vacuum line running to
    the intake plenum. Did they change this for later cars?



    Mine is in the intake plenum at the other end from the throttle body. It is
    about as far as you could possibly get from the throttle body without
    depositing the PA sensor directly into a cylinder.
     
    TeGGeR®, Sep 16, 2005
    #21
  2. Kevin in Iowa

    TeGGeR® Guest


    Shit. TA sensor, not PA sensor.

    TeGGeR regrets the error.
     
    TeGGeR®, Sep 16, 2005
    #22
  3. Kevin in Iowa

    mmdir2005 Guest

    According a Honda 84-91 manual book , Atmoshereic sensor is call Air
    jet controller. Amount of air getting to engine changes as the altitude
    change.
    The name of this device is only 84-91 model. I did not find the same
    name
    for Hodan Model after 92... it's funny name how they got that name.
    But...I don't think this is a electronic device.
     
    mmdir2005, Sep 16, 2005
    #23
  4. Kevin in Iowa

    TeGGeR® Guest

    wrote in

    That's for a CARBURETED CAR.

    It isn't. It's an analog device used on carburetors. Cars with electronic
    fuel injection do not need such devices, which is what I said before.
     
    TeGGeR®, Sep 16, 2005
    #24
  5. Kevin in Iowa

    TeGGeR® Guest

    It is. See here.

    http://hosted.yourimg.com/05/259/02/atmosphericpressure.gif
    [/QUOTE]


    Would this have been used on '88-'89s, the the last of the carburetors?
     
    TeGGeR®, Sep 16, 2005
    #25
  6. Kevin in Iowa

    TeGGeR® Guest

    Thanks. I didn't know that until now. It makes sense, though.
     
    TeGGeR®, Sep 16, 2005
    #26
  7. Sure. Two places I know of. Beside the
    steering column and the passenger kick panel.
    Modern cars is located inside the ECU.
     
    Burt Squareman, Sep 16, 2005
    #27
  8. It is. See here.

    http://hosted.yourimg.com/05/259/02/atmosphericpressure.gif
     
    Burt Squareman, Sep 16, 2005
    #28
Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments (here). After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.