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IAC: what is diff between min steps & temp hysteresis?
Posted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 9:26 am
by TheMonkey
both these variables seem to determine what size bites that the IAC valve should take.
what's the distinction?
i understand how the variables work, but is there a reason to have both?

Re: IAC: what is diff between min steps & temp hysteresis?
Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 5:24 am
by grippo
They do 2 separate things. The min step is there because some people have trouble moving 1 step at a time - the motor may or may not execute it. But if you only move when you have accumulated say 4 steps, then the motor moves properly.
The hysteresis variable is there to prevent the motor constantly switching back and forth. When you reach a temperature, it won't move in the other direction unless the temp drops by more than say 5 deg. That way noise won't cause it to be constatntly moving +/- 1 step and wearing the motor.
Re: IAC: what is diff between min steps & temp hysteresis?
Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 6:08 am
by TheMonkey
okay, thanks Al.
i was thinking that hysteresis was also like a 'bite size'. so that if you had it set to 5*, that IAC would only move whenever temps moved by 5* chunks even if it was steady in the same direction.
but, it sounds like hysteresis determines how large of a temp reversal it needs to be, and the min steps is how large the chunk size needs to be in any direction.
IF in a certain IAC step table with a straight line, 10 steps = 5*, and you set hysteresis to 1*, and min step size to 10.... would that effectively set hysteresis to 5* (even though it's programmed as 1*)?
Re: IAC: what is diff between min steps & temp hysteresis?
Posted: Sun Feb 22, 2009 10:36 am
by grippo
TheMonkey wrote:
IF in a certain IAC step table with a straight line, 10 steps = 5*, and you set hysteresis to 1*, and min step size to 10.... would that effectively set hysteresis to 5* (even though it's programmed as 1*)?
Yes.