Throttle Position Sensor

A throttle position sensor reports the angle and movement of the throttle plate to the engine control unit. On cable-operated systems it is commonly a replaceable rotary potentiometer attached to the throttle shaft. Electronic throttle bodies usually contain two non-contact or resistive position channels integrated with the actuator motor, so the complete throttle assembly may be the only service part.

Select by registration or VIN, exact engine code, build date, throttle-body part number and sensor connector. Confirm mounting holes, shaft drive shape, rotation direction, electrical pinout, closed-throttle setting and whether the sensor is separate, adjustable or factory-calibrated into the body. A sensor that bolts on can produce an inverted or differently scaled signal if the internal track is wrong.

Symptoms include hesitation, unstable idle, poor response, reduced-power mode, harsh automatic shifts, warning lamps or position-correlation codes. These do not prove sensor failure. Wiring damage, poor 5-volt reference, shared sensor shorts, throttle deposits, a sticking cable, worn throttle shaft, pedal-sensor faults, low battery voltage and an electronic actuator problem can all create similar evidence.

Inspect the connector lock and throttle-shaft drive before ordering. Oil ingress, spread terminals or a rounded plastic coupling can interrupt the signal even when the resistive or magnetic element remains serviceable.

Diagnose with live data and a multimeter or oscilloscope. The signal should move smoothly through the specified range without dropouts, spikes or dead zones. Dual channels must maintain their designed relationship; they may move in opposite directions. Do not short a signal to battery voltage, pierce insulation carelessly or force an electronic throttle plate while testing.

Mark an adjustable sensor's original position before removal, but set the replacement to the published base voltage rather than copying a possible old error. Never alter the mechanical stop screw. Fit a new seal where specified, tighten small fasteners evenly and carry out throttle/idle adaptation with stable battery voltage. Verify closed and wide-open data, pedal correlation, idle, response and no new fault codes. Compatible throttle position sensors are listed below.

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Throttle position is a central engine-load signal

The throttle angle helps the ECU interpret driver demand, acceleration rate and expected manifold airflow. It influences transient fuelling, ignition, idle control, transmission shifts, traction control and diagnostic plausibility.

Position is not the same as airflow. Pressure, temperature, engine speed and airflow sensors provide additional evidence, allowing the ECU to detect a signal that is electrically valid but physically implausible.

Sensor designs

DesignOperating principleService feature
Single-track potentiometerWiper moves over a resistive track.Common separate sensor on cable throttles.
Dual-track potentiometerTwo signals provide plausibility.May be separate or integrated.
Hall-effect sensorMagnetic field changes with shaft angle.Non-contact and often sealed.
Magnetoresistive sensorMagnetic angle changes resistance/electronics.High precision in electronic throttle bodies.
Integrated throttle moduleSensors, motor and gears form one assembly.Individual sensor not normally replaceable.
Switch-plus-sensorIdle contact combined with variable track.Older systems need both idle and angle adjustment.

Potentiometer operation

Reference and earth

The ECU supplies a regulated reference, commonly around 5 volts, and a sensor earth. The resistive element divides this voltage according to shaft position.

Signal wiper

A moving contact outputs a fraction of the reference. Repeated operation wears the region around idle most heavily, causing intermittent dropouts during small openings.

Adjustment

Slotted mounting holes allow some older sensors to rotate for a specified closed-throttle voltage. Later units are keyed and learned electronically.

Dual-channel safety

Electronic throttle systems use redundant channels so one failure cannot command uncontrolled torque. One signal may increase with opening while the other decreases, or both may rise at different rates. The ECU checks their sum, ratio or difference.

Do not judge one channel as faulty simply because it runs “backwards”. Use the manufacturer graph and compare both throughout a slow sweep.

Exact selection checks

CheckPossible variationRisk if wrong
Throttle designCable, electronic or separate idle valve.Sensor may not be individually serviceable.
Shaft driveD-flat, blade, tang and rotation direction.Sensor cannot engage or signal reverses.
Connector/pinoutReference, earth, one or two signals.Physical fit can damage ECU circuits.
Signal rangeBase voltage, slope and wide-open value.ECU sees implausible angle.
MountingFixed holes, adjustable slots or sealed cover.Closed position cannot be set correctly.
Production dateRevised throttle body or control software.Wrong calibration despite same engine.
Integrated featuresIdle switch, motor or temperature sensor.Required functions remain absent.

Symptoms and alternative causes

SymptomPossible sensor connectionAlternative checks
Hesitation off idleWorn track dropout.Air leak, fuel pressure and ignition.
High or unstable idleIncorrect closed signal.Throttle deposit, cable tension and PCV leak.
Reduced-power modeChannel correlation failure.Pedal sensor, throttle motor, wiring and voltage.
Harsh transmission shiftsLoad signal changes abruptly.Transmission input sensors and fluid/control faults.
Fixed 0% or 100% readingOpen/short circuit or sensor.Reference supply, earth and scan scaling.
Fault only when hotInternal track/electronics expansion.Connector, harness and throttle motor temperature.
Code returns after replacementWrong calibration or no relearn.Shared 5 V short and mechanical throttle issue.

Diagnostic trouble codes

A code describing “circuit low”, “circuit high” or “correlation” identifies the failed test, not automatically the part. Circuit low can result from a signal shorted to earth; circuit high can be a short to reference; correlation can involve pedal, motor or mechanical binding.

Record freeze-frame data and all related codes before clearing. Multiple sensors with 5-volt faults may share a reference. Disconnecting one shorted sensor can restore others and reveal the actual branch.

Live-data sweep test

With ignition on and engine off where permitted, move the throttle slowly through its full safe travel while watching raw voltage and calculated angle. Look for smooth monotonic change. Percentage values can be scaled and may not read exactly 0 or 100 at mechanical limits.

Graphing helps reveal brief dropouts hidden by a numeric display. Repeat while gently moving the harness and at the temperature where the symptom occurs. Do not open a motorised plate by hand unless the service method explicitly allows it.

Oscilloscope testing

Back-probe with suitable fine adapters and plot signal against time during a slow sweep. A good potentiometer produces a clean ramp; vertical spikes or flat interruptions suggest track or contact failure.

Check both channels simultaneously and compare with the specified relationship. Set voltage range to protect equipment and sensor circuits. A scope cannot prove mechanical throttle movement unless position is also observed.

Reference voltage and earth

Measure the 5-volt supply relative to sensor earth, then check earth voltage drop under circuit operation. Chassis earth is not always the same reference used by the ECU. A poor sensor earth raises or distorts several signals.

Never apply external battery voltage to “wake” the sensor. Use ECU-provided reference and an approved breakout. Repair terminals with correct plating, retention and sealed splices.

Throttle shaft and mechanical condition

Excess radial shaft play moves the sensor and plate unpredictably and allows unmetered air around the bore. A new sensor cannot correct a worn throttle body. Check cable free play and return spring on mechanical systems.

Deposits can hold the plate slightly open, changing learned angle. Clean only by the approved method and do not alter the factory stop. Electronic gears can be damaged by forcing the plate.

Safe replacement sequence

  1. Confirm diagnosis, exact sensor or complete throttle requirement, base setting and adaptation.
  2. Record codes, raw voltages, channel relationship and learned values.
  3. Turn the ignition fully off, allow modules to sleep and isolate battery power only where the throttle procedure specifies it.
  4. Release the connector by its lock and inspect pins for spread, corrosion or oil.
  5. Mark an adjustable sensor's position without moving the mechanical stop.
  6. Remove small fasteners with the correct bit, preventing them entering the intake.
  7. Inspect shaft drive, throttle movement, gasket and mounting face.
  8. Preload or align the new sensor only as specified and tighten evenly.
  9. Reconnect, set base voltage or perform throttle adaptation with stable battery support.
  10. Verify smooth data, idle, response, pedal correlation and absence of new codes.

Adjustment and adaptation

For an adjustable sensor, use the published closed-throttle voltage and idle-contact state. Tightening screws can rotate the body slightly, so recheck afterwards. Do not set wide-open voltage by changing throttle-stop position.

Electronic systems may learn closed and limp-home angles through a scan-tool basic setting or key sequence. Follow model-specific instructions; generic pedal pumping is unreliable. Failed adaptation is diagnostic evidence of voltage, fitment or mechanical trouble.

Integrated sensor boundaries

Do not open a sealed electronic throttle cover to replace tracks or gears unless an approved remanufacturing procedure exists. The cover maintains alignment and environmental sealing, and safety channels are factory calibrated.

If diagnosis proves an integrated sensor fault, replace the complete throttle assembly and carry out required coding/adaptation. Transfer hoses and seals carefully and check intake leakage.

Common mistakes

  • Replacing the sensor from a fault-code description alone.
  • Assuming a reverse-moving second channel is defective.
  • Checking voltage only at closed and open positions, missing dropouts.
  • Applying 12 volts to a 5-volt reference or signal pin.
  • Adjusting the mechanical stop screw to obtain a desired reading.
  • Forcing an electronic plate through its reduction gears.
  • Ignoring a shared reference-voltage short elsewhere.
  • Skipping throttle/idle adaptation after installation.

Safety, urgency and MOT relevance

ConditionRiskAction
Unexpected acceleration/high idleLoss of speed control.Stop safely and switch off.
Reduced-power warningLimited response in traffic.Diagnose promptly and avoid unsafe road use.
Repeated stallingLoss of assistance/control at junctions.Do not drive until resolved.
Harness contacts moving partsIntermittent short or open circuit.Secure and repair before operation.
Channel correlation faultElectronic throttle safety system degraded.Test both sensor and pedal/actuator circuits.
Engine warning remainsEmissions and torque control may be affected.Complete diagnosis rather than clearing repeatedly.

A throttle-position fault can illuminate the engine malfunction indicator and affect emissions, relevant to UK MOT inspection on applicable vehicles. Any unpredictable torque response makes the vehicle unsafe regardless of warning-lamp status.

Throttle position sensor FAQs

Q: What does a throttle position sensor measure?
A: It reports throttle-plate angle and movement to the engine control unit.

Q: Is the sensor always replaceable separately?
A: No. Electronic throttle bodies commonly integrate it into a sealed assembly.

Q: Why are there two position signals?
A: Redundant channels allow the ECU to detect implausible or unsafe readings.

Q: Should both signals rise together?
A: Not necessarily; one may fall as the other rises by design.

Q: Does a throttle code prove sensor failure?
A: No. Wiring, reference voltage, pedal sensor and mechanical faults can set it.

Q: How is a worn track detected?
A: Graph voltage through a slow sweep and look for spikes, dropouts or dead zones.

Q: Can the 5-volt signal be tested with battery power?
A: No. Applying 12 volts can damage the sensor and ECU.

Q: Can the stop screw be adjusted?
A: No. It is factory set and must not be used to change sensor voltage.

Q: Does a new sensor need calibration?
A: Adjustable types need base setting and many systems require throttle adaptation.

Q: Can throttle deposits affect the reading?
A: They can hold the plate open and alter learned position or airflow.

Q: Can a bad sensor affect transmission shifts?
A: Yes, because throttle/load information can influence shift timing and pressure.

Q: Can it cause an MOT failure?
A: An emissions warning or resulting engine fault can affect inspection.

Q: When should the vehicle not be driven?
A: Do not drive with unexpected acceleration, high idle, repeated stalling or unpredictable throttle response.