Did you mean EVR solenoid or EGR solenoid? Do all of these connectors have just 2 terminals that you jump with the resistor or is it more involved than that? Don't understand the EVP resistance formula. Do I use 2 resistors for that? Are they used individually on separate circuits or maybe wired in series or parallel for one circuit? Thanks again for the help.
Randy
Yes,all but the EVP sensor use just two terminals.Jumping the harness plug terminals is exactly what you do.The EVP sensor will require three resistors in total & yes you'll be running them in series by making whats called a resistors triangle, which I'll explain more about below.........
EVR is basically short for EGR Vacuum Regulator solenoid.Its the single solenoid mounted above the dual tab/tad solenoids on the rear of the passenger strut tower.The solenoids & sensors discussed in previous posts & this one,except the EVP (EGR Valve Position) sensor,use a harness plug with two pinouts.For the resistor,hold onto it,then use pliers and bend each wire end into a 90° angle then insert each wire end into one of the harness plug pinouts and you're done. The resistor basically simulates the coils resistance which is what makes them work. Use this same technique for any of the other emissions solenoids/sensors/valves you've deleted that you don't want a code to pop up for.
For the EVP sensor,you bend each resistor wire end into a 90° angle then insert each wire end into the correct harness plug pinout,like shown in the diagram at the bottom of this post.The only difference is,youll be inserting a wire end from two separate resistors into each of the three harness plug pinouts on the evp sensor harness plug.The evp sensor is the only one out of all the emissions devices,that you'd delete,that requires this 3 resistor setup.
The other devices only require 1 resistor.If you don't wanna insert 1 resistor at a time on the evp harness plug,just set the resistors out on a table,form them into the shape of a triangle (matching how theyre layed out in the diagram below as far as ohm/watt value goes) twist the wire ends together at each intersecting point (3 of them) bend the wire ends into a 90° angle and insert each wire end pair into each harness plug pinout & you're done.
If you dont wanna mess with making the resistors triangle,you can use the following method instead to keep the cel from coming on.
1) Remove the EVP sensor from the EGR valve,leave the harness connected
2) Turn the key on/engine off
3) Backprobe the harness terminals as follows.
Connect the black multimeter lead to the black/white wire terminal
Connect the red multimeter lead to the brown/lt green wire terminal
4) Manually push the evp rod inwards until the meter reads any voltage value between
0.24-0.63 volts.
5) Once the voltage reading is between this range,hold the rod in that position,wrap some electrical tape around the sensor body & over the end of the evp rod,so that the rod stays in that position once you take your finger off of it.
6) Verify the rod hasnt moved any,with the meter,then pour some superglue on the rod where it meets the sensor body,let it set up/cure then remove the tape & check voltage with the meter again to make sure the rod is glued into the correct voltage range (0.24-0.63)
7) Reattach the sensor to the egr valve then reinstall the valve (unless youre gonna use a block off plate over the egr spacer holes where the egr valve is normally positioned)
The procedure above accomplishes the same thing as installing a resistors triangle or a egr delete plug.
You can leave the egr valve & evp sensor installed with the wiring harness plugged in or remove the evp sensor from the egr valve,remove the egr valve from the egr spacer & block the holes with a block off plate then ziptie the evp sensor to anything in the engine bay that'll prevent it from moving around.