Moderator: The Mod Squad
1hypo3 wrote:Might need a bit more info on this jaycar kit you have?
To check if its the way you have wired in this kit or if its faulty , disconnect the output wire from ecu and check the signal, if its a pulsed signal you will need an oscilloscope that way you will know if its the kit or the ecu.
gasman wrote:I thought you could get away with not running the FP ecu and just live with a noisey pump and a engine check light on.
gasman wrote:couldn't you set up a fuel pump relay and set it to click of when the alternator charge light comes on? and to click on during cranking by tapping into the starter solenoid power feed?
whynot wrote:so if I understand this right you are looking for a voltage coming out of this wire on the ecu? My understanding was that most outputs from an ecu are ground outputs in which case you will only get a reading when you put your multi meter from positive 12v to the wire and trigger the output.
I don't have my notes with me, but you use an NPN transistor with the B terminal connected to the 2JZ FPC terminal, C terminal to the ground side of the COR coil, and the E terminal is grounded to the chassis. The positive side of the COR coil goes to switched a 12V source. You should have a diode across the relay coil to prevent a current surge in the backwards direction. What this does is when the 2JZ ecu thinks the pump should be running it sends a 3-5V signal to the FC terminal. The transistor sees this and closes the circuit for the relay to ground. Mine has works flawlessly since day 1 and its built into my adapter harness. The total cost is under a buck and much more elegant than other solutions I've seen. HTH
docTRD wrote:Hey Adrian, if you want a spare 2jzgte ecu to try I have one, its an aristo one. Ive mucked around with FPC before also and they can be quite confusing. Ive got a scope you could use to see whats coming from the FPC as if it is a PWM signal a multimeter will not read it properly as its expecting a sine wave. cheers
sergei wrote:Cooked resistor is just a symptom.
You will need to replace the transistor (T707) that drives that circuit.
If you can't find exact one, I can help you find equivalent.
MrOizo wrote:How do i find which one on the board it is? and how can i even tell if this resistor is in the FPC circiut?
sergei wrote:From circuit point of view the transistor should be directly connected to the pin. Crude way to find out is set the multimeter to Ohm meter mode and chuck one of the probes on the pin, and keep probing every Collector (C) until you find one close to 0 Ohm.
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot], Google [Bot] and 14 guests