The powertrain control module is one of the electronic control modules used on a vehicle. Others include antilock brake, airbag, transmission, body,
the module of a helical gear is calculated in the same way of that of a spur gear: module=pitch diameter / no of teeth the module of a helical gear is calculated in the same way of that of a spur gear: module=pitch diameter / no of teeth
Of course not! There is no direct relationship between electric current and electric energy. They aren't even measured in the same units. Also in most cases small electric currents provide less electric energy that very large electric currents. If all electric currents provided the same electric energy then the electric current from a flashlight battery that lights the bulb when you turn the switch on could provide the same electric energy as the electric current in a lightning bolt when it strikes... therefore every time you turned on a flashlight the electric energy would destroy the flashlight and electrocute you! As this doesn't happen, the only answer that your question can have is no!
no
Electric current does not drop. Electric voltage, however, drops across a wire because the wire has non-zero resistance. (Do not confuse electric current with electric voltage - they are not the same.)The reason current does not drop is that, in a series circuit, according to Kirchoff's current law, the current at every point in a series circuit is the same.
No, the two systems need a different coil resistance.
No, BCM is for interior items, pcm is for engine.
No, the solenoid pack is part of the transmission. The powertrain control module is the engine computer.
The powertrain control module is one of many electronic control modules on a 2003 Dodge Caravan.
I just learned something ! That the EEC computer and the powertrain control module are the same thing ! On the 1991 and 1992 models the powertrain control module (PCM) is located in the right front passenger area behind the right side kick panel.
Yes. The PCM (powertrain control module) is the same as the engine computer.
Yes the ecm( engine control module)/ pcm( powertrain control module) are the same thing. Different manufacturers use different acronyms, ECU (engine control unit) is another often used.
ECM stands for "Engine Control Module" and is the generic term for the computer that controls engine functions. On some models, this same computer also controls the transmission, and is referred to as the "PCM" or "Powertrain Control Module".
The PCM is the powertrain control module ( engine computer ). There are also abs, airbag, transmission, body, cluster, and HVAC computers on a 2001 Intrepid.
Nope. One is a relay, the other is a control module. The control module TELLS the relay when to operate.
Most of the tiime, yes.
The ECM (Engine Control Module) or PCM (Powertrain Control Module) may appear to look the same as others but most are programmed (Flashed) to exactly match the vehicle it is going in.
It's 'electronic control module', and the one for the engine will be one of the computers on the vehicle.