Operation CHARM: Car repair manuals for everyone.
Hosted by mcallihan.com

Powertrain Controls - ECM/PCM

DTC 25 - Intake Air Temperature Sensor Circuit (High Temperature Indicated):




Intake Air Temperature Sensor Wiring Circuit:





Circuit Description:
The Intake Air Temperature (IAT) sensor uses a thermistor to control the signal voltage to the Powertrain Control Module (PCM). The PCM applies a voltage (4-6 volts) on CKT 472 to the sensor. When intake air is cold, the sensor (thermistor) resistance is high, therefore, the PCM terminal "PC9" voltage is high. As the air warms, the sensor resistance becomes less, and the voltage drops. As the incoming air gets warmer, the sensor resistance decreases, causing PCM terminal "PC9" voltage to decrease.

DTC 25 Will Set When:
^ Signal voltage indicates an intake air temperature greater than about 151°C (304°F).
^ Vehicle speed is greater than 15 mph.
^ Engine run time is greater than 320 seconds.

Action Taken (PCM will default to): The Malfunction Indicator Lamp (MIL) will illuminate, the PCM will default to 60°C for intake air temperature (Tech 1 scan tool will not display defaulted value), and the cooling fan will enable.

DTC Chart Test Description: Number(s) below refer to circled number(s) on the diagnostic chart.

1. This step checks if DTC 25 was set as an intermittent or a hard condition.

Diagnostic Aids: The "Temperature vs. Resistance Value" scale at the right may be used to test the IAT sensor at various temperature levels to evaluate the possibility of a skewed (mis-scaled) sensor. A skewed sensor can result in poor driveability.

Refer to "Intermittents," in "Diagnosis By Symptom." - Intermittent Malfunctions