Operation CHARM: Car repair manuals for everyone.

49 State

CRANKSHAFT SENSOR DESCRIPTION
The Dual Hall crankshaft sensor contains two hall digital output devices (PIP, CID) in one package. The sensor is located on a bracket mounted near the crankshaft damper.

Magnetic Flux Field:





Hall Effect Device Response To Vane:





Two rotary vane cups (or wheels) are mounted on the damper and are used to trigger the hall sensors. The vane cups are made of ferrous metal. When the window of a cup is in the air gap between the hall device and the permanent magnet, a magnetic flux field is completed from the magnet through the Hall device and back to the magnet. This condition results in a low (zero volt) output signal. As the crankshaft turns, a tooth on the cup will move into the air gap. The magnetic field will be shunted by the tooth preventing it from reaching the hall device and the output signal will change from a low to a high (B+).

The PIP cup has two teeth resulting in two positive going edges each revolution of the crankshaft, and the CID cup has one tooth and generates one positive edge per revolution of the crankshaft. CID is used by the ICM to enable it to select the proper coil to fire. The PCM tells the ICM when to fire, but the CM has to select one of the two coils based on CID signal (which two of four coils if in the DPI mode).