If you measure 47 ohms across the inner two terminals, and another 47 ohms or thereabouts on the outer terminals, and nothing from the inner two to the outer two then you are O.KBottleFed70 wrote:
I checked my wiring today and I seem to have the "o-ring style" GM IAC with the inline 4 pin connector. I measured coil resistance of approx 47ohm/ Please see the attached picture as to how I have it wired into my relay board. I believe I jumpered everything properly during the build, but I must admit I found some of the IAC wiring instructions a little confusing.
In this case it does not matter, but follow the IAC actual pins. If you had both coil's polarity reverse the motor would still turn correctly. You would have to get one coil reversed and the other correct, and then the motor would just turn opposite from what you expect. In this case just swap one coil polarity, either one.BottleFed70 wrote: One thing I couldn't tell from the picture was wether I'm supposed to be looking at this from the perspective of looking at the IAC pigtail connector or the IAC itself. Perhaps I have the polarity of both coils backwards? I took it from the perspective of looking at the IAC.
The thing to note is that one driver pair is X2 and X3 (respective pins 38 and 37 on the 40-pin processor socket) and the other is X4 and X5 (36 and 35 on the processor socket). Pair X2 and X3 connect up to one coil. Pair X4 and X5 connect up to the other coil. Keep this pairing straight and it should be OK.BottleFed70 wrote:
I'd love to do a continuity test from the IAC pigtail connector to the MSII daughter card(or elsewhere on the ecu) if you can give me some instructions on what I'm looking for? (IE which IAC pin should go to which MSII pin).
One test for the driver is to use two LEDs in "anti-parallel" arrangement. All this means is to take two LEDs and hook one LED anode to the other's cathode, and vise-versa on the other leads. So you have two LEDs pointing in different directions. Put in a series resistor, say 470 ohms, and hook this arrangement to X2-X3 and make up another LED pair and hook to X4 and X5. Depending on the current direction one or the other LED will glow. So when the motor moves the LEDs will flicker back and forth. You could even wire this up in parallel with the stepper motor and run the wires into the passenger compartment and use this as a visual of direct stepper driver activity.
- Bruce