24Car Repair
Advanced Automotive Diagnostics & Technical Repair Guides
Throttle Control System – Limit Throttle Position: Complete Technical Analysis
Technical Classification: Manufacturer-Specific Drive-By-Wire Fault Code | System: Electronic Throttle Control (ETCS) | Severity: High (Forces Limp Mode) | Repair Urgency: Immediate
DTC P1555 represents a critical fault within the Electronic Throttle Control System (ETCS) where the Powertrain Control Module (PCM) or Engine Control Module (ECM) has detected an implausible or irrational throttle valve position signal that violates predetermined safety parameters. This code specifically indicates that the PCM has actively intervened to restrict throttle blade movement to a limited range (typically 7-12% of total travel) as a failsafe measure to prevent potential engine damage or unsafe vehicle operation.
2. Throttle Control System Architecture & Operation
Modern electronic throttle systems (drive-by-wire) operate on a dual-redundant feedback loop consisting of:
| Component | Primary Function | Signal Type | Normal Voltage Range | Failure Mode Impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Accelerator Pedal Position (APP) Sensor | Converts pedal angle to voltage signal | Dual Analog (Varying) | Sensor 1: 0.5-4.5V Sensor 2: 0.25-2.25V |
P2122, P2123, P2127, P2128 |
| Throttle Position Sensor (TPS) 1 | Primary throttle blade position feedback | Analog (Increasing) | 0.5V (closed) to 4.5V (WOT) | P0120, P0122, P0123 |
| Throttle Position Sensor (TPS) 2 | Secondary/redundant position feedback | Analog (Decreasing) | 4.5V (closed) to 0.5V (WOT) | P0220, P0222, P0223 |
| Throttle Actuator Motor (DC) | Positions throttle blade via gear train | PWM Controlled | 4-16Ω resistance | P2100, P2101 |
| PCM/ECM Processor | Compares APP vs TPS signals, controls motor | Digital Processing | 5V Reference Output | Internal Fault Codes |
3. Associated & Related Diagnostic Trouble Codes
P1555 rarely occurs in isolation. Understanding related codes is crucial for accurate diagnosis:
| DTC | Description | Relationship to P1555 | Diagnostic Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| P2101 | Throttle Actuator Control Motor Circuit Range/Performance | Direct precursor – motor cannot achieve commanded position | HIGH |
| P2135 | Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor/Switch “A”/”B” Voltage Correlation | Simultaneous fault indicates sensor mismatch | HIGH |
| P0121 | Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor/Switch “A” Circuit Range/Performance | Primary TPS signal out of expected range | MEDIUM |
| P0221 | Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor/Switch “B” Circuit Range/Performance | Secondary TPS signal out of expected range | MEDIUM |
| P2119 | Throttle Actuator Control Throttle Body Range/Performance | Mechanical binding preventing full travel | MEDIUM |
| P1564 | Throttle Control Unit Basic Setting Incorrect | Adaptation values corrupted or incomplete | MEDIUM |
| P1570 | Throttle Actuator Position Sensor Circuit Malfunction | Internal TPS circuit failure within throttle body | HIGH |
4. Advanced Diagnostic Procedures & Voltage Specifications
4.1 Preliminary Diagnostic Steps (Required Tools: Advanced Scan Tool, DVOM, Oscilloscope Recommended)
Step 1: Freeze Frame Data Analysis
- Engine RPM at Fault: Typically occurs at idle (650-850 RPM) or low-speed acceleration
- Engine Load: Usually 25-40% when fault triggers
- Coolant Temperature: Often when engine is at operating temperature (90-105°C)
- Vehicle Speed: Most common at 0-25 mph or during takeoff
- Throttle Position: Will show fixed value (e.g., 8.5%) once limp mode active
Step 2: Active Throttle Data Monitoring (KOEO – Key On Engine Off)
| Parameter | Normal Value | P1555 Indication | Acceptable Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Commanded Throttle Position (%) | Matches pedal input (0-100%) | Fixed at limp value (7-12%) | ±0.5% of command |
| Actual Throttle Position (%) | Matches commanded within 1% | Does not follow command | ±1% of commanded |
| TPS Sensor 1 Voltage | 0.5V (closed) to 4.5V (WOT) | Static or erratic | Linear progression |
| TPS Sensor 2 Voltage | 4.5V (closed) to 0.5V (WOT) | Non-complementary to Sensor 1 | Inverse of Sensor 1 |
| Throttle Motor Duty Cycle | 10-90% varying | Maxed at 90-95% | Smooth modulation |
| Adaptation Status | “Completed” or “OK” | “Interrupted” or “Failed” | Must show completed |
5. Comprehensive Repair Procedures & Technical Specifications
5.1 Throttle Body Bench Testing Protocol
6. Vehicle-Specific Technical Data & Common Failures
| Manufacturer | Common Models | Throttle Body P/N Range | Specific Failure Points | Special Tools Required |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Volkswagen/Audi | 2.0T FSI/TFSI, 1.8T, 3.2L VR6 | 06F-133-062, 06J-133-062 | Carbon buildup on blade edges, TPS IC failure, motor brush wear | VCDS/VAG-COM, Throttle Alignment Tool |
| Toyota/Lexus | 2AZ-FE, 2GR-FE, 1UR-FE | 22050-0P010, 22050-31010 | Gear train wear, water ingress via harness connector | Techstream, Throttle Body Gasket Set |
| BMW | N52, N54, N55 engines | 13-54-7-585-813 | Integrated DME failure, VANOS interaction faults | ISTA/D, BMW Scan Tool |
| Mercedes-Benz | M272, M273 engines | A000-141-01-05 | Hall sensor failure, linkage bushing wear | XENTRY/DAS, Star Diagnostic |
| General Motors | Ecotec 2.0L/2.4L, 3.6L V6 | 12677933, 12658090 | Throttle position sensor drift, connector corrosion | GDS2, GM MDI |
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Limited operation only. The vehicle is in “limp-home” mode, restricting speed to 25-40 mph with reduced power. This is for emergency use only to reach a repair facility. Extended driving can cause additional stress on the transmission and may lead to complete throttle failure.
Most vehicles require this 4-step process after throttle body service:
- Basic Setting: Performed with scan tool to teach PCM throttle closed position
- Idle Learn: Engine at operating temperature, all accessories off, idle for 5-10 minutes
- Drive Cycle Learn: Multiple acceleration/deceleration cycles under specific conditions
- Adaptation Clear & Relearn: Using manufacturer-specific software to reset adaptive values
This indicates a persistent mechanical or electrical fault rather than a temporary glitch. Common reasons include:
- Incomplete or failed throttle adaptation
- Binding in throttle blade mechanism
- Intermittent wiring issue (vibration-sensitive)
- Progressive motor failure that worsens under load
- PCM software requiring update (TSB often exists)
Varies by manufacturer but generally follows this pattern (Key On Engine Off, throttle manually moved):
| Throttle Position | TPS1 Voltage | TPS2 Voltage | Sum of Both |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fully Closed (0%) | 0.48-0.52V | 4.48-4.52V | 4.96-5.04V |
| 50% Open | 2.45-2.55V | 2.45-2.55V | 4.96-5.04V |
| Wide Open (100%) | 4.48-4.52V | 0.48-0.52V | 4.96-5.04V |
Key diagnostic: The sum of both TPS voltages should always equal approximately 5V (±0.1V).
Depends on root cause. If P1555 was triggered solely by carbon buildup preventing full closure/opening, cleaning may provide permanent resolution. However, if the code is due to:
- Worn motor brushes: Temporary fix (weeks/months)
- Failing TPS sensor: No improvement
- Internal electronics failure: No effect
- Wiring issues: No effect
Always perform complete diagnosis before assuming cleaning will solve the issue.