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I highly doubt that the oem you have is "Chinese" or American. Almost all of the UFI made in China is for domestic and Asian consumption.
Maybe someone covered this already.I would replace the filter just because it feels good, but you say there is good acceleration on the other side of 3,000 rpm so I cannot see how it can be a filter.If there is enough flow to give good performance up high, it’s not going to be sub standard at 3,000...
I would start with cleaning the timing sensors.
In 1st pic oil pressure is upper & cam timing(for ignition) is on bottom- may have metal slivers on it.2nd pic is oil temp3rd pic is crank timing--- may have metal slivers on it4th pic is altenator
I said it way back in the beginning. Its a dirty TPS. It lives below the throttle body. Fuel mist condenses and drips down inside, evaporates, leaves gum residue. Easy enough to drill a tiny hole and spray tuner cleaner inside. Transforms performance. You have to learn where and how to test for TPS voltage.Or buy a new TPS.I've just been through the exact symptoms on 98EV. I knew what do do and its good as new.If you lot would lift quarantine rules, I'd fly over to Shannon and do it for you in exchange for a pint.Patrick HayesFremont CA
The rear sensor is in a dry environment so there's a lot of "swarf" that can accumulate on it, the front sensor is inside the oil mist of the block so less likely to attract cludge to block it up.Have you messed with the trim dial on the side of the computer box? It's covered by a rubber plug, I wouldn't screw that until last resort unless it's already been molested. I think you can trigger a faulty code that might shed some light on the source if it's one of the sensors. Do you have the fuel injection supplement manual? That covers the procedure for reading those fault codes.http://dpguzzi.com/efiman.pdf
cam timing(for ignition) is on bottom- may have metal slivers on it.3rd pic is crank timing--- may have metal slivers on it
As mentioned the front sensor may have shims. But....It seems that many did not have shims. It's just something to watch for.I can't remember if you ever tested the voltage of the TPS to see if it advanced smoothly?Good luck,Tom
A little part of carbon track was weared out.
My experience with 170,000 miles of EV seat time is cleaning works 50% of the time. But it is basically free so always worth trying.
Is there a post or tip on where to drill the hole? I have 02 and while it checks out OK with a VOM, sometimes I get a throttle hickup.
If you want to know where it is twist grip wise. Put a piece of masking/painters/paper type tape on the throttle about 2 inches long right next to the rubber grip. Then put just a small piece on the rubber grip. Take a marking pen and put a mark on the long tape and small tape with throttle off. Then turn it to W/O and put another mark on the long tape. Now guestimate the middle of the two marks on the long tape and mark. Now you have half marked. Put two more to make quarters.Now when you go down the road you can WHEN SAFE look to see where the problem is at least per the twist grip.Tom
I think you have the same TPS as my 98EV. You can drill a hole as shown here by the little white spot. Spray in 'tuner cleaner', work the pivot, blow it out with air. Rinse and repeat.Maybe I'll come over and set it up for you!!!!Patrick HayesFremont, CA