bud37 wrote:Source of the post is it possible something could fool the ecu into thinking the engine is lean when it may not be and then over fuel it creating this issue.....
Yes, that's certainly possible and something you need to consider while troubleshooting. A symptom could be a cause and not an effect or could be an effect by a completely (seemingly) unrelated cause. Something like a bad (or disconnected) coolant or air temp sensor could do that. Also, something like a bad O2 sensor could cause the engine do do just that. The O2 sensor is really the only thing that tells the ECU if the engine is lean or rich, otherwise the ECU is just "guessing" based on all the other inputs.
However, with the IAC also commanded down low that means there is plenty of air (too much) getting in the engine to run it at idle, even though the IAC is commanded shut.
The fuel pressure would definitely cause a rich condition too, even though the ECU isn't intentionally trying to make things richer. The ECU is commanding the injectors with a "normal" pulse, but with a higher-than-correct fuel rail pressure, the injector would squirt more fuel than the ECU is expecting.