O2 sensor question.....
O2 sensor question.....
I currently have some Bosche O2 sensors that are just over a year old. My Scanmaster is showing the right side acting crazy. I have heard you guys say nothing but bad things about The Bosche product.
The parts house is going to replace them under warranty and I have the choice of Bosche, Borg Warner or Delphi. Is the Delphi the OEM GM part?
WIll I be fine with the Delphi.
Thanks
The parts house is going to replace them under warranty and I have the choice of Bosche, Borg Warner or Delphi. Is the Delphi the OEM GM part?
WIll I be fine with the Delphi.
Thanks
Re: O2 sensor question.....
When GM sold off AC/Delco, the new company is call "Delphi"..... so, yes, Delphi is OEM.
What do you mean by "acting crazy"? Have you tried swapping the left and right sensors to see if the problem (whatever it is??) follows the sensor? That would allow you to determine if its actually a sensor problem, or if its something else.
What do you mean by "acting crazy"? Have you tried swapping the left and right sensors to see if the problem (whatever it is??) follows the sensor? That would allow you to determine if its actually a sensor problem, or if its something else.
Re: O2 sensor question.....
Originally Posted by Injuneer
When GM sold off AC/Delco, the new company is call "Delphi"..... so, yes, Delphi is OEM.
What do you mean by "acting crazy"? Have you tried swapping the left and right sensors to see if the problem (whatever it is??) follows the sensor? That would allow you to determine if its actually a sensor problem, or if its something else.
What do you mean by "acting crazy"? Have you tried swapping the left and right sensors to see if the problem (whatever it is??) follows the sensor? That would allow you to determine if its actually a sensor problem, or if its something else.
Acting crazy the voltage on the left was consistent the right side was bouncing around from 100-900 with no apparent consistency to be seen.
I recently checked header bolts and I don't have leaks.
Re: O2 sensor question.....
Originally Posted by wrd1972
Acting crazy the voltage on the left was consistent the right side was bouncing around from 100-900 with no apparent consistency to be seen.
I recently checked header bolts and I don't have leaks.
I recently checked header bolts and I don't have leaks.
If the left one is steady in closed loop, its not working correctly. Let me take a guess.... is the left one nice and steady, aroung 450mV?
If not, what is the reading?
Re: O2 sensor question.....
Originally Posted by Injuneer
Actually, its the right one that is running correctly.... when the PCM goes into closed loop, its going to switch between slightly rich (900mV) and slightly lean (100mV) about 9 times per second, if its functioning correctly.
If the left one is steady in closed loop, its not working correctly. Let me take a guess.... is the left one nice and steady, aroung 450mV?
If not, what is the reading?
If the left one is steady in closed loop, its not working correctly. Let me take a guess.... is the left one nice and steady, aroung 450mV?
If not, what is the reading?
Re: O2 sensor question.....
Originally Posted by Injuneer
That means the left one it either dead, or is not connected. Did you use any extensions when you added the headers?
Would it still giva a reading if it were not making good connection?
Again the value will bounce around just a bit, it also seems to respond to RPM change. It sounds like it is working but not the way it should.
Re: O2 sensor question.....
With no sensor connected, or with a dead sensor, the PCM sees only the bias voltage it supplies to the sensor, which is 450mV. Swapping them will tell you very quickly if its the sensor or something else. If the problem moves with the sensor, its a dead sensor. If the problem stays where it was, its the wiring or an engine problem. Then you swap the extensions side to side to see if thats the problem. I've seen people with problems with new harness extensions, so don't rule anything out, or assume they are making reliable electrical connections because they look good.
Since the voltage is moving a little on the left side, its a good chance the sensor is deceased, but its sure a lot cheaper to do the swaps than to just assume its a sensor and buy a new one.
Since the voltage is moving a little on the left side, its a good chance the sensor is deceased, but its sure a lot cheaper to do the swaps than to just assume its a sensor and buy a new one.
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