Mass Air Flow Meter TTM2.0
What it does
It measures electronically the mass of air entering
the engine and signals the ECU accordingly. The ECU
uses this information to calculate the engine’s
ignition/fuel needs.
How it works:
The ECU supplies a voltage to the meter which heats
up either a small wire (Platinum filament) or element
(Platinum film resistor) to a certain temperature.
The wire or element sits in the incoming air stream
and is consequently cooled. The ECU needs to maintain
the temperature of the wire by applying a higher or
lower voltage/current. The greater the cooling effect
of the incoming air, the higher the voltage that is
required to heat it. This varying voltage forms the
basis of the signal back to the ECU which is used
to calculate the engine’s ignition/fuel system
requirements. Some meters are equipped with an additional
intake air temperature sensor built in. The unit is
fitted between the air filter assembly and the throttle
housing.

Reasons for failure;
One of the original weaknesses of this type of meter
was foreign bodies on the sensing element. This was
countered by the manufacturers with the addition of
a circuit within the ECU that applies a high voltage
to the meter, for a few seconds, after the ignition
is turned off. This heats the element to red hot which
burns off any foreign bodies.This cured the problem
but brought another with it. Any wire when repeatedly
heated and cooled will anodise, consequently the meter’s
accuracy diminishes over time. Although it will still
function it will be out of tolerance and can cause
high fuel consumption, MOT emissions failure and poor
performance. The self diagnose function of the ECU
may or may not detect the fault as the meter will
still function.Other failures are caused by connector
or wiring failure and electrical interference.
Testing:
There are two methods of testing air mass meters;
Firstly, using a conventional fault code reader and
relying on the ECUs stored fault codes. This is not
a very reliable method as it can pick up air mass
meter failures but will not highlight a meter that
is simply out of tolerance. It can be a quick guide
to “point you in right direction”.
Secondly, specific testing with an oscilloscope,
this is very accurate, the meter can be tested dynamically
but it can still be difficult to highlight slight
out of tolerance failures. Testing this way will show
any interference or connection problems. Check the
rise and fall of the output curve in direct response
to revving the engine. You can also test the meter
under load with the help of a rolling road or an on-road
test with the oscilloscope in the car.
Note:
It is always useful to keep a library of ‘scope
patterns for comparison, test some good ones and keep
a print out for reference.
Caution:
Replacing just the element out of an air mass meter
assembly is not always a good policy. There are many
varieties of meter (differences include connector
shape, output signal, physical dimensions, etc and
there are very few replacement elements so the possibility
of error is high. The unit may fit but is the output
accurate?
For further technical
information concerning Air Mass sensors please phone
our technical help line 01527 839307