My GTA turbo has had very intermittent variations in idle speed and jerky progress off / on throttle. After finding a vacuum leak, cured sticking idle speed control valve and high resistance in certain connectors to main engine management sensors, it was mostly better, but not quite.
Like Paulrob who I spoke to at RATS open day, I looked at the TPS. The microswitches functioned, but there was high resistance when they closed - between 50 and 150 Ohms on a meter measured at the connector (disconnected). Also the time to respond from open to closed varied when manually operating the throttle. They operate as a mechanically operated logic gate to the ECU - Idle low resistance, part load infinite resistance, full throttle no resistance. If the poor thing doesn't recognise if it's meant to read high or low, it can't decide the right fuel/ignition.
I went off to Maplin to get 2 replacements. They really are identical, off the shelf, £2.30 each, and easy to fit. The sealed plastic cover on the TPS prises off cleanly through the plastic weld. It was sealed afterwards with silicone RTV adhesive/sealant. The most skillful part is to gently prise off the metal clips holding the microswitches into the location pillars. Go slow and carefully.
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Transformation in driving experience was huge and immediate, like driving a brand new car. That's why it is the best £4.60 investment.
I would recommend anyone with a standard GTA turbo to check their condition do the same if switch resistance is greater than zero (say 0.8 Ohm max). It's a miracle that the microswitches last as long as they do.
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