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Stuneis, DO read before you start twisting screws and trying to adjust things. The TBI system is not very difficult to understand, but I think you'd have to have some pretty sophisticated equipment to actually adjust anything correctly. PCV is absolutely correct! There may be a sensor that is bad, or you could even have an EGR problem.
In a few words, the TBI system works like this: the fuel pump keeps constant pressure available to the TBI unit. The computer reads all the sensors (coolant temperature, oxygen, throttle position, air flow, etc.) and determines how much fuel to allow the TBI to deliver in order to keep the mixture correct. There are two injectors in the TBI unit that receive electronic pulses from the computer. The injectors are either on all the way or off all the way---there is no "in between". The amount of fuel delivered by the injectors is governed by the pulse width of the injector signal. Another way to state it is that the fuel quantity is governed by the amount of time the injectors are turned on. As long as the sensors are operating correctly, and everything else is right, the computer will cause the injection to be right on the money.
I learned all this trying to cure a problem similar to yours on an '87 pickup with the 305/TBI. In my case, the EGR Valve was opening waaaay too soon, causing the thing to be on the verge of stalling when the throttle was barely cracked open. If I was you, I would take a close look at that EGR valve. You can see it operating, and even manually open it by pushing on the backside of it. I would assume that you can force it to close manually also. If you force it closed and the idle smooths out, there's the problem. There is a solenoid that operates the valve, and it could fail also.
Whatever you do, DO NOT try to adjust the idle speed. You'll only complicate the situation!
Hope this helps!
-Andrew-
edited to add: Sometimes I don't think first...you can close the EGR by simply pulling the vaccuum hose off of it (be sure and plug the hose so you get an accurate picture of how things are with the EGR closed and WITHOUT a huge vaccuum leak). It SHOULD close unless it's seriously BROKEN or fouled by carbon deposits.
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