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SignUp Now!You are correctSo basically I need the translator to upgrade to an ls1 maf? Correct me if I'm wrong.
When replacing a MAF you have two choices. You can upgrade to a translator and modern MAF or you can go the parts house route.
If you go the parts house route make friends with a counter person and have them 'accidently' order 12 of them. Back in the old days before translators it took 12 times on average to get one that's calibrated close enough. (in my case it was exactly 12)
Will it run with the maf unplugged?
Have you verified fuel pressure?
Diagnos don't throw money at it.
If its fine on the highway the fuel pump is fine. With the car idling in park in the driveway, smack the MAF with a screwdriver a few times and see if the idle shudders. Alot of times a bad MAF wont set a code. The computers in these cars are pretty slow/stupid
^ This is the best advice I've read throughout this entire thread. You have this poor guy convinced that he needs a new MAF when there's about a 10% chance that this is his problem.Save yourself some $$ and some grief.... Find someone familiar w/ these cars, and have them go over it for you.
^ This is the best advice I've read throughout this entire thread. You have this poor guy convinced that he needs a new MAF when there's about a 10% chance that this is his problem.
That's fine but don't be surprised that your issue still remains after the install. Who knows, you may get lucky and you do have an MAF sensor that took a dump. However, if you read this thread from the very beginning, you will see that as soon as you posted that the car stumbled after tapping the MAF, this thread became useless. Tapping an MAF is no way to test the component. When my iPhone starts acting up, do I take a screwdriver to it to see if it will respond accordingly?I was really planning on getting ls1 maf and translator this weekend.