Welp as I said, replaced maf this morning.. have to a run a KOER tomorrow and see if it's still there..
But, if a signal is only sent OUT, why is it a 4 wire sensor? Should be a 3 wire sensor.
You'd be a dear if you measured voltage across C and D with your MAF disconnected... we'd know for sure then.
How badly do you want to drive the car? If you would bother to read AND digest the Code 66 test path I posted, most of your MAF related questions would be answered.
liljoe07 said:You are missinformed. The 5v signal is not sent to the Mass Air sensor. Its sent from the Mass Air Sensor to the ECM. So the ECM can determine the engines Fuel and Load state. So again..... The 0v-5v signal is sent OUT of the Mass Air. Not INTO the Mass Air.
VREF powers the Mass Air so it can send the Signal OUT! Its an output signal. Also, code 98 is because of code 66. So once code 66 is fixed, 98 will go away as well.
Wrong answer.
Vref doesn't go anywhere near the MAF. The 12 volts supplies the voltage for the MAF output. There is a regulator circuit inside the MAF sensor to reduce the 12 volts to the 5 volts used by the differential amplifier circuit inside the MAF sensor. Actually MAF pins C & D float with reference to ground. The signal output of the MAF is a differential amplifier setup. Pins C & D both carry the output signal, but one pin's output is inverted from the other. The difference in signal between C & D is what the computer's input circuit is looking for. The difference in the two outputs helps cancel out electrical noise generated by the ignition system and other components. Since the electrical noise will be of the same polarity, wave shape and magnitude, the differential input of the computer electronically subtracts it from the signal. Then it passes the signal on to an Analog to Digital converter section inside the computer's CPU chip.
I have over 36 years experience in the computer/electronics business, so I can assure you that my description is correct and accurate. Google differential amplifier and you'll find what a differential amplifier is. If you have a good electronics background, it will be very clear to you.