You are correct, there is a spring on the throttle plate shaft. On many of the cars that have problems in the throttle linkage (especially high mileage cars) the wrong things get tight and the other wrong things get loose! I find that even with the spring the throttle plates aren't always closing consistantly against the throttle stop when the quadrant link is worn. The main point to my last post is that any play or looseness can be the cause of the throttle not hitting the micro switch and starting up the idle motor system. Before getting deep into a complicated electical system make sure it is not some simple mechanical problem in the first place! If the throttle cable itself is tight then that could prevent the throttle from retuning all the way to idle. I have also seen where the accelerator pedal bracket has bent because the cable is tight. When the pedal bracket bends you cannot open the throttle all the way. A simple check: have an assistant hold the pedal all the way down while you watch the throttle spool, it should just trip the Wide Open Throttle switch without smacking it. David Teitelbaum vin 10757 --- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "Gary Hull" <Gary@xxxx> wrote: > David said: > >If you are having a lot of trouble getting the motor to idle > >down and you have to hit the pedal to do it one thing to check > >is the "quadrant link". > > That's true, but the throttle plate shaft has its own spring. If the > throttle plate mechanism is aligned, clean, and lubricated, that spring > should close the throttle plates, (as long as the "quadrant link" isn't > stopping it). If you use the throttle spool spring via the quadrant link to > force the throttle plates closed, you can end up with excessive slack in the > throttle cable. > > Gary > www.PNDC.org > www.IN2TIME.com > www.DeloreanCarShow.com