P0227
Diagnostic Chart (Part 1 Of 2):
Diagnostic Chart (Part 2 Of 2):
Schematic:
CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION
The Accelerator Pedal Position (APP) module provides a voltage signal that changes relative to the accelerator pedal position. There are 3 sensors located within the APP module that are scaled differently.
CONDITIONS FOR RUNNING THE DTC
The ignition is ON.
CONDITIONS FOR SETTING THE DTC
^ The voltage is less than 0.25 volts on the APP 3 sensor.
^ The conditions were met for 2 seconds.
ACTION TAKEN WHEN THE DTC SETS
^ The service throttle soon lamp will not illuminate when one APP DTC sets. The PCM will only illuminate the service throttle soon lamp when multiple APP DTCs set.
^ The PCM records the operating conditions at the time the diagnostic fails. This information is stored in the Failure Records.
CONDITIONS FOR CLEARING THE MIL/DTC
^ A History DTC clears after 40 consecutive warm-up cycles, it this or any other emission related diagnostic does not report any failures.
^ Use a scan tool in order to clear the DTCs.
DIAGNOSTIC AIDS
There are no driveability issues associated with the APP module unless a DTC is present. The most likely cause of this DTC are poor connections or the sensor itself. The least likely is a PCM problem.
A scan tool reads the APP 3 position in volts. The scan tool should read approximately 4.0 volts with the throttle closed and the ignition ON or during idle. The voltage should steadily decrease as the throttle is moved toward a Wide Open Throttle (WOT). Also, go percent pedal travel is acceptable for correct APP operation. Scan the APP 3 sensor while depressing the accelerator pedal with the engine stopped and the ignition ON. The display should vary from approximately 4.0 volts when the throttle is closed to approximately 2.0 volts when the throttle is held at a WOT position.
TEST DESCRIPTION
The numbers below refer to the step numbers on the diagnostic table.
2. This step will determine if DTC P0227 is the result of a hard failure or an intermittent condition.
3. This step checks the PCM and the wiring.