Your bench test of the AFM looked fine to me in terms of voltages, but the dropped out areas may indeed be worn carbon traces on the pot tract. Those would cause hiccups when driving, but not make the idle consistently lean or the vacuum consistently low. The AFM's electrical signals do not directly control vacuum. The AFM did not look like the root cause of your issues, based on those tests anyway. Now if it also happens to have its own vacuum leak, that would be different.NCGermerican wrote: Wed Mar 18, 2026 10:58 am I may have found the issue folks, but I'm not going to say it's 100% until I do a little more digging. And be sure to cut me some slack on my smoke testing. I could have done a better job of sealing off some of the lines, but it was getting late and I was getting tired. It's been days since I finished and my garage STILL STINKS.
The ChatGPT test, as described in the video, doesn't make sense. The barn door creates a voltage that the DME reads on Pin 7. If you open the door, that voltage is going to go up, and the DME will think there is more air, and the car will get richer. The more you open the barn door, the richer it will get, until it ultimate floods and stops running. To the extend chatgpt said otherwise, it was an AI swing and a miss. (Try CarBot here. It's powered by OpenAI but supplemented with 944-specific information.)
You discount the possibility of a vacuum leak because your idle is not high (and presumably the smoke tests), but the odds still point to that. My guess is your base idle is just set correctly and/or on the low side, and your ISV is able to keep the RPM down in spec. If you reset the base idle higher, you might get a fast idle once beyond the ISV's ability to correct.
That said, have you done a compression or leak down test? Vacuum needs to first be generated by a healthy engine, then preserved by the vacuum system. Smoke tests only test for the latter.... Also, I wouldn't pay much attention to the vacuum level until the car reaches full operating temp -- i.e., when the oil pressure is well below 4 at idle. Most cars will pick up 2 or 3 points from the time the coolant first reaches operating temp and later when the engine is truly warmed up and all the mechanical parts have fully expanded. The oil pressure is a much better proxy for that then the coolant temp gauge...
