Carautonomy — car parts and warning lights explained
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Sensors

What is a Throttle Position Sensor?

A potentiometer that tells the ECU exactly how far you're pressing the accelerator.

Throttle BodyTPSOutput: 0.5V → 4.5Vto ECUPedal angle → voltage signal → ECU sets fuel & timing

Simplified animation — not to scale.

In plain English

A small sensor attached to the throttle body shaft (or to the pedal assembly on drive-by-wire systems) that converts butterfly angle into a 0–5V signal.

A simple analogy

"Like the volume dial on a stereo — turn it slowly and the engine matches you; if the dial is broken the music skips or cuts out."

How it works

Inside is a resistive track and a wiper that moves with the throttle shaft. At closed throttle the output sits around 0.5V; at wide-open throttle it climbs smoothly to about 4.5V. The ECU combines this with MAF and RPM data to decide how much fuel to inject and when to fire the spark. Modern electronic throttles have two redundant sensors and the ECU compares them constantly — any mismatch triggers limp mode to keep the car safe.

Signs of trouble

  • Hesitation or surging under acceleration
  • Sudden idle drop or stall
  • Limp mode with reduced power
  • Check engine light (P0120 / P0121)
Rough UK cost

£55–£210

Parts: £25–£120
Labour: £30–£90

Always get a written quote. Prices vary by car, region, and parts brand.

Heads up: Carautonomy is for general guidance only. If your car is showing warning lights or behaving oddly, get it looked at by a qualified mechanic.

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