Originally posted by PetrolM3
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Making the throttle reliable...and how quickly can you kill a TPS?
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What am I doing wrong if none of these sensors have failed on me in over 100k miles? lol
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When I daily drove the car I'd basically kill the front one on an annual basis. I just kept a spare with me at a certain point. Never had throttle pedal issues.
I had thoughts of rigging up a hall effect type sensor for better reliability, but never really got around to it.
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I had all 3 sensors fail under 100k miles in this order: front by oil filter housing, rear on actuator, and accelerator pedal. I first replaced the front with VNE which failed within 10k. Got a second one under warranty which was defective right out of the box. Replaced with genuine BMW and solved the issue. Shortly after that, the rear one failed and I replaced it with genuine BMW. Not long after that, the pedal failed. Replaced with genuine BMW. All 3 worked flawlessly another 7-8 years though not a lot of miles (around 40K).
When I say failed - from what I remember, the sensors were so bad the car was going into limp mode. The pedal itself was choppy - the car would not accelerate smoothly... first hesitate then lurch forward.
I never had any issues with the throttle actuator or linkage.
PS. This was all street use but all summer driving and high temperature climate.Last edited by PetrolM3; 05-14-2024, 04:26 AM.
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Originally posted by heinzboehmer View PostI had the TPS under the intake fail in 5-10k mi. Can't recall how many track days in that time frame, but there was definitely track use.
Originally posted by heinzboehmer View PostAlso, looks like the E46, E39, E38 and E53 all use the same throttle pedal. Might be worth ripping one out of a junkyard car to test with (or a couple to rule out a bad junkyard pedal) if you think that's the culprit.
I also want to test the TSP and the pedal, but I don't have the proper test equipment.
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I had the TPS under the intake fail in 5-10k mi. Can't recall how many track days in that time frame, but there was definitely track use.
Originally replaced it with one of the VNE sensors, but decided to go genuine BMW the second time around. Time will tell if there's any difference in quality.
Also, looks like the E46, E39, E38 and E53 all use the same throttle pedal. Might be worth ripping one out of a junkyard car to test with (or a couple to rule out a bad junkyard pedal) if you think that's the culprit.Last edited by heinzboehmer; 05-13-2024, 03:51 PM.
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Making the throttle reliable...and how quickly can you kill a TPS?
Hi folks,
I have a 2005 with about 170k miles on it. I'm converting it over to a track car for HPDE, so it's under stress routinely and I need it to be reliable. Given that these events are costly, I'm trying to address the typical causes of downtime before I go to the track. One cause is the drive-by-wire throttle that consists of numerous moving parts and sensors.- The accelerator pedal, part number 35426786282; not available until mid-late summer 2024 and there are none of the latest part versions available used (as of May 2024)
- The TPS Sensors, part number 13637840383; there are two and these are readily available aftermarket
- The throttle actuator, part number 13627840537; this comes with a TPS sensor, and is available aftermarket
- the throttle actuator pull rod, part nuber 13547839073, and is available aftermarket
- How quickly have you killed the front TPS by the oil filter housing?
- Have any of you ever replaced a failing throttle actuator?
- Does the pull rod last (essentially) forever, or should it be replaced on high mileage cars?
- I believe it's possible that my top side TPS has failed in two years, 18k miles, and 20 track days
- No, but I wonder how long it can last
- I doubt a linkage that's not lubricated could last forever; mine is original
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