got diagnosed at autozone
the cel said something about o2 sensor low reading (i dont exactly remember, something about being low or slow reading/voltage), does that mean my 02 sensor is bad, or something else is causing a low/slow reading
Originally Posted by mxl36o
the cel said something about o2 sensor low reading (i dont exactly remember, something about being low or slow reading/voltage), does that mean my 02 sensor is bad, or something else is causing a low/slow reading
if you can get to the o2 sensor and get a voltmeter to it... do it. take a look at the numbers going back to the pcm. get a $2 bottle of propane with a on/off valve and shoot some propane into the intake. see if the voltage on the o2 increases.
if it increases really fast... like in less than a second... your o2 is fine.
if it doesn't change or changes slowly (like .2v going to .8 volts in like 5 seconds), you go a lazy or defective o2.. then replace it.
Originally Posted by taz77
that's not really much of a diagnosis, is it?
if you can get to the o2 sensor and get a voltmeter to it... do it. take a look at the numbers going back to the pcm. get a $2 bottle of propane with a on/off valve and shoot some propane into the intake. see if the voltage on the o2 increases.
if it increases really fast... like in less than a second... your o2 is fine.
if it doesn't change or changes slowly (like .2v going to .8 volts in like 5 seconds), you go a lazy or defective o2.. then replace it.
if you can get to the o2 sensor and get a voltmeter to it... do it. take a look at the numbers going back to the pcm. get a $2 bottle of propane with a on/off valve and shoot some propane into the intake. see if the voltage on the o2 increases.
if it increases really fast... like in less than a second... your o2 is fine.
if it doesn't change or changes slowly (like .2v going to .8 volts in like 5 seconds), you go a lazy or defective o2.. then replace it.
In the online resources thread at the top of this section there is a download for the 5th and 6th gen civic HELMS manuals. Find out what the P code is and do the troubleshooting methods listed in there. It will require a multimeter with continuity, voltage, and resistance capabilities.
hih
Originally Posted by westcoaststyle
it would help if we had the code to better help you... what P number did they give you? P0135? P0141?



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