This is going to read as condescending. I don’t mean it that way. I just don’t know how to write it polite.
How do you know the rpm is increasing when at operating temperature? Feel, sound or actual tachometer?
If it really is increasing, then independent of a binding accessory such as a water pump, alternator, power steering pump. Or a fuel supply restriction/lift pump thing. It is probably an internal injection pump issue.
One last possible rude question. What year and model vehicle is this on? Your avatar is a GMT400 truck. If it is that truck you are asking about then it might be an apples and oranges thing going on here depending on the year. All of the GMT400’s have an electric lift pump and 994 to 1999 have the electronic DB4 IP. Totally different animal but since you write about the throttle cable I assume you are working on a DB2.
Not rude at all. I didn’t realize my avatar said GMT400, I’ll try to fix that.
It’s on a 93 Ford IDI.
I know the rpms increase by the tachometer. I can hear it’s elevated by sound too.
This is cold idle…
This is warm idle…
probably doesn’t seem like a big issue but it bothers me. Main reason is because when I shut the engine off, the belt chirps. I thought it was normal until one day it threw the belt off and broke the tensioner pulley when I shut the engine off. At that time I thought it was just the tensioner pulley so I replaced it. Put the belt back on and still had the chirp when shutting the engine off. A week later the belt flew off when I shut the engine off and broke the tensioner again. I replaced tensioner and a new belt this time. With the new belt no more chips when shutting off the engine. It has been several months now and the tensioner is still going. This may not make any sense but the last time I worked on the tensioner it was in November and getting cold. Through the winter months my full temperature engine idle rpms did really rise. They stayed close to 675 rpm. I do not know why the winter months would matter other than keeping the engine little cooler than in the hot summer temperatures.
I have read this in a DB2 article…
Retention of heat is a critical factor in fuel thinning after a high-ambient heat soak. As the hotter, thinner fuel passes through the pump, internal leakage increases and reduces fuel output. To compensate for this loss, a bimetallic temperature compensator strip was added to the governor arm to increase the metering valve opening. This provides a compensated idle speed curve and corrects engine idle speed at elevated ambient temperature.
I feel this is what I’m seeing and I believe it to be working I just don’t know if there is a way to adjust it?
Overall the elevated rpms at idle don’t bother except I believe it puts strain on the belt and tensioner and ultimately leads to it breaking. Along with premature belt wear.