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You haven't found the above on your engine correct? That is because your engine is carbed, and instead of a idle air control solenoid, you have dc motor controlled throttle. You have a DC motor that screws in and out to control the idle speed. If you simply have this mis-adjusted, and the dc motor cannot unwind enough to drop the idle speed of the engine, it will set this code.
I would experiment with the setting on the motor on the carb. Turn it back to lower the idle speed.
I think you will find replacing parts may not fix it. It may be an adjustment problem. It has a complex idle adjustment procedure. I have a scan of the procedure below. You can see they call it a "idle speed control". If you buy a new one, you will still have to go through this procedure to get it adjusted.Yes, I have the
Yes, I have a carbed 2.8. I see this called IAC on several parts sites but it’s out of stock everywhere. To the best of my knowledge I had thought this was the throttle position sensor. I’ve read in a few places that the Cologne V6 had an IAC even though it was carbed because Ford was making a last ditch effort to make the carb viable in the mid 80s. That was confusing to me, so thanks for confirming it’s not true.
I wasn’t able to find any info on that DC motor in my Chilton but I’ll check Haynes when I get home. Thank you so much!
I realized your photo is rock auto and went there first.. for those hunting:
the details of that part:
and right there the interchange:
Walker 2201000
OR
E3TZ9D825A, E3TZ9N825A, E3TZ9N825B, E47F9N825AB, E4ZF9N825AA, E4ZZ9N825A, E7SF9N825AA, E7SZ9N825A
(presumably FORD part numbers)
so I just googled one of em - the last one
looks like it lists as being for T-birds up till 87 and F series with 300 straight six as well... going the 300 straight 6 gave me this
1986 FORD F-150 4.9L 300cid L6 Idle Air Control (IAC) Valve | Shop Now at RockAuto
Fuel & Air Parts and More for Your 1986 FORD F-150 at Reliably Low Prices. Fast Online Catalog. DIY-Easy. Your Choice of Quality. Full Manufacturer Warranty.www.rockauto.com
Standard Motor Products AC20T
United Motor Products IAC9
Standard Motor Products AC20 (no T suffix)
and
Walker 2201000
well if all those are acceptable, then 3 of the 4 are not out of stock - could try one of those.
caveat - the 3 look to have a flange on the side to mount to the intake tube/throttle body/something - different than yours.
OR
Take your old part into a good brick and mortar (I like O-Reilly) with all those part numbers.Take your VIN too since they will want to start with the VIN....
and have em pull which ever one they have on the shelf in your brand/price range and compare that there isn't some little extra flange or some other reason why Oreilly's house brand or Standard or United didn't list for Bronco ii.
I'm seeing places where 1985 is the very very last year in the drop down now (fordpartscatalog.com) - so there just might be database issues with the online places basically dropping anything the day it hits 40 years.
I believe this is the key - I've been going in circles finding a lot of conflicting info, but since it's a carbed engine I doubt it has an IAC even though I keep seeing that. I'm assuming its a DC motor and needs to be adjusted. It's fantastic that you found that though! Amazing and infinitely helpful! I'll give it a shot when I'm back at home.I think you will find replacing parts may not fix it. It may be an adjustment problem. It has a complex idle adjustment procedure. I have a scan of the procedure below. You can see they call it a "idle speed control". If you buy a new one, you will still have to go through this procedure to get it adjusted.
I can't remember where I got it, I have several manuals laying around.I believe this is the key - I've been going in circles finding a lot of conflicting info, but since it's a carbed engine I doubt it has an IAC even though I keep seeing that. I'm assuming its a DC motor and needs to be adjusted. It's fantastic that you found that though! Amazing and infinitely helpful! I'll give it a shot when I'm back at home.
Also, where did you find this? It seems like that book/manual could be useful for other issues and it refers to some figures I'd like to see also
I think this is the one. Looking at the lead time for the one above, I am wondering if they can even get it.AFAIK there is a supplier in Britain with new distributors. There is a thread with his info in it somewhere, fairly recent.
This isn't the one I was thinking but may be legit;
Ford Duraspark – Performance Distributors
performancedistributors.com
Apparently they ran the 2.8 engine overseas for a longer period and have more of them still on the road over there.I think this is the one. Looking at the lead time for the one above, I am wondering if they can even get it.
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Ford Cologne V6 Bosch Type Distributor
Ford Cologne V6 Bosch Type Distributor from Powerspark| Electronic & Points Classic Car Distributors | from Powerspark Ignition | UK Suppliersimonbbc.com
I can't remember where I got it, I have several manuals laying around.
I had a 2.8, was all original. But it would not run correctly. It would suddenly have a fast idle sometimes, I never could pinpoint it. So I took this system off, bought a regular carb from Amazon and bought a rebuilt distributor for a 1978 Mustang II with a 2.8. This distributor is the conventional style that does not need a computer.
The 2.8 in the 1970's was not computer control. So you can convert over. Problem is, everyone was converting, and the supply of the 1970's style distributor for the 2.8 dried up. I haven't looked lately, maybe you could find one if you wanted to go this route. There are some threads on here about people looking for a conventional distributor for the 2.8, and I believe a different style is being made in England that you might be able to source.
As you said, this system is old and can be difficult to work on. Some parts can be hard to find. It did work well when it was new.