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-   -   Faulty oxygen sensor (https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/showthread.php?t=368650)

  • Jun 24, 2009, 03:58 PM
    pbr3232
    Faulty oxygen sensor
    I am getting an error code that tells of a faulty oxygen sensor on a 97 chevy 2500 van. The van runs at about half power until it warms up then it goes. I replaced plugs wires.

    Thanks

    Peter
  • Jun 24, 2009, 04:16 PM
    Stratmando

    Did it say replace wires or Faulty O2 sensor?
    Check voltage to sensor, may be 5 volts.
    Others here may provide additional info.
    Shop Manuals are a great investment. Can save time and money.
  • Jun 24, 2009, 05:04 PM
    TxGreaseMonkey

    This link should allow you to change it yourself, even though it's geared to Hondas:

    https://www.askmehelpdesk.com/cars-t...tml#post223376

    Go with an ACDelco oxygen sensor.
  • Jun 24, 2009, 05:57 PM
    RickMN

    Here's how to remove and replace an oxygen sensor--article with photos

    Replace oxygen sensor

    Here's how they work

    Oxygen sensor operation
  • Jun 24, 2009, 07:29 PM
    Stratmando

    TX or rick, can you confirm you should have 5 volts at sensor connector, plus the data wire(s)?
    A good sensor won't work with no voltage?
  • Jun 24, 2009, 07:50 PM
    RickMN

    There are 4 wires going to the O2 sensor. You didn't tell us which engine, so I'll have to wing it on the wire color. The pink should have 12 volts to the heater inside the sensor. The black wire is the ground for the heater. The computer supplies .5 volts to the sensor on the purple wire. Depending on how much oxygen is left in the exhaust, the sensor varies the return voltage back to the computer on the tan wire. The computer sends out this small voltage just to make sure the wiring is OK to the sensor. But if the sensor is working properly, it will return a voltage reading of almost 1 volt for rich exhaust and .1 for lean. The reading switches at least 8 times per second, so you really need a scope to track the changes.

    What TX is talking about with the 5 volts is that the computer provides a 5 volt reference signal to most other sensors in the car. So if you see a full 5 volts on the purple wire, that means you have a short either in the computer on in the wiring harness. If you feed 5 volts into the O2 sensor the return signal will always be higher than 1 volt and the computer will see this as a rich condition and as a wiring problem (since it's only expecting to see .5 volts at startup).

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