Electronic Throttle Control (ETC) System Strategy
The torque based ETC strategy was developed to improve fuel economy and to accommodate variable cam timing (VCT). This is possible by not coupling the throttle angle to the driver pedal position. Uncoupling the throttle angle (produce engine torque) from the pedal position (driver demand) allows the powertrain control strategy to optimize fuel control and transmission shift schedules while delivering the requested wheel torque.
The ETC monitor system is distributed across 2 processors within the PCM: the main powertrain control processor unit (CPU) and a monitoring processor called an enhanced-quizzer (E-Quizzer) processor. The primary monitoring function is carried out by the independent plausibility check (IPC) software, which resides on the main processor. It is responsible for determining the driver-demanded torque and comparing it to an estimate of the actual torque delivered. If the generated torque exceeds driver demand by a specified amount, the IPC takes appropriate corrective action.
Since the IPC and main controller share the same processor, they are subject to a number of potential common failure modes. Therefore, the E-Quizzer processor was added to redundantly monitor selected PCM inputs and to act as an intelligent watchdog and monitor the performance of the IPC and the main processor. If it determines that the IPC function is impaired in any way, it takes appropriate Failure Mode and Effects Management (FMEM) actions.
| Effect | Failure Mode (1) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| No Effect on Driveability | A loss of redundancy or loss of a non-critical input could result in a fault that does not affect driveability. The ETC lamp illuminates, but the throttle control and torque control systems function normally. | ||
| Disable Speed Control | If certain failures are detected, speed control is disabled. Throttle control and torque control continue to function normally. | ||
| RPM Guard with Pedal Follower | In this mode, torque control is disabled due to the loss of a critical sensor or PCM fault. The throttle is controlled in pedal-follower mode as a function of the pedal position sensor input only. A maximum allowed RPM is determined based on pedal position (RPM Guard). If the actual RPM exceeds this limit, spark and fuel are used to bring the RPM below the limit. The ETC lamp and the MIL illuminate in this mode and a DTC P2106 is set. EGR, VCT, and IMRC outputs are set to default values. |
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| RPM Guard with Default Throttle | In this mode, the throttle plate control is disabled due to the loss of throttle position, the throttle plate position controller, or other major electronic throttle body fault. A default command is sent to the TPPC, or the H-bridge is disabled. Depending on the fault detected, the throttle plate is controlled or springs to the default (limp home) position. A maximum allowed RPM is determined based on pedal position (RPM Guard). If the actual RPM exceeds this limit, spark and fuel are used to bring the RPM below the limit. The ETC lamp and the MIL illuminate in this mode and a DTC P2110 is set. EGR, VCT, and IMRC outputs are set to default values. | ||
| RPM Guard with High Forced Idle | This mode is caused by the loss of 2 or 3 pedal position sensor inputs due to sensor, wiring, or PCM faults. The system is unable to determine driver demand, and the throttle is controlled to a fixed high idle airflow. There is no response to the driver input. The maximum allowed RPM is a fixed value (RPM Guard). If the actual RPM exceeds this limit, spark and fuel are used to bring the RPM below the limit. The ETC lamp and the MIL illuminate in this mode and a DTC P2104 is set. EGR, VCT, and IMRC outputs are set to default values. | ||
| Shutdown | If a significant processor fault is detected, the monitor will force vehicle shutdown by disabling all fuel injectors. The ETC lamp and the MIL illuminate in this mode and a DTC P2105 is set. | ||
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| DTCs (1) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| P0606, P060X | PCM processor failure (MIL, ETC lamp) | ||
| P2106 | ETC FMEM - forced limited power; sensor fault: MAF, one TP, CKP, TSS, OSS, stuck throttle, throttle actuator circuit fault (MIL, ETC lamp) | ||
| P2110 | ETC FMEM - forced limited RPM; 2 TPs failed; TPPC detected fault (MIL, ETC lamp) | ||
| P2104 | ETC FMEM - forced idle, 2 or 3 pedal sensors failed (MIL, ETC lamp) | ||
| P2105 | ETC FMEM - forced engine shutdown; E-Quizzer detected fault (MIL, ETC lamp) | ||
| U0300 | ETC software version mismatch, IPC, E-Quizzer or TPPC (non-MIL, ETC lamp) | ||
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