trakkies wrote:WildMuskrat wrote:I am not sure what you mean by voltage, I thought the sensor was resistance measured. The part I am using is the DYI autotune GM open IAT, the only number I can find is the 5040 number on the senor it self
Thanks
Voltage is applied to one side of the sensor and comes out the other at a different value due to its resistance. So if you measure one side to ground with a voltmeter, you''ll get 5 volts on the input terminal and somewhat less on the output (which varies with temperature). Doing this check shows if the entire circuit working - whereas measuring the resistance just the sensor.
This isn't quite correct.
One side of the sensor is grounded. The other side connects to the ECU.
The ECU side (pin 20) has a pull up resistor internally that when using a DMM on this pin will show voltage. The ECU reads how little or how much voltage is on this wire, to calculate actual temp. As sensor warms up, resistance goes down, pulling the reference voltage down as well. So if you back probe the IAT/MAT sensor wire when the sensor is cold, you will see a higher voltage, than when the sensor is warm.
When using a DMM to check for volatge on this wire, it will show that the internal pull up resistor is installed and correct. If I'm reading the V2.2 board schematic correctly, the pull up resistor is attached to vref, which should be 5V, trhough a resistor, so you should see 5V or less on the MAT/IAT wire, without the IAT/MAT plugged in. With the IAT/MAT plugged in you should see less than 5V.