Hello all.
ok this isn't about the living meowing type so not to worry those animal lovers :-)
Ok well my daily driver (ford fiesta 2003 mk6) is up for sale but before it goes i want to make sure it's all ok as i try to sell as if i were
intending to buy. but more to the point lately its been realy sluggish and the engine management lights cropped up. had it reset and again its back.
fault reads lower lambada sensor fault.
mot station say the cats dead go buy a new one so went to the local exhaust place were the mechanic asked for a look before ordering and booking
anything. well hes said it doesn't smell like it, car doesnt seem restricted when reved so hes sugesting sensor but to run an emisions test first
incase.
What else can i try to do?
what are the tell tale signs of a dead cat??
If you don't observe it then it wont be dead or alive.
When you call it for its tea and I'd doesn't come in?
I've not much of an idea about CAT's I'm afraid but there's a product called something like Cataclean thats supposed to be really
good..
Or if you belive its just a sencor fault you could swap the upper and lower sencors IF their the same and see if the fault follows.
If you don't observe it then it wont be dead or alive.
No - it will be BOTH dead and alive
quote:
Originally posted by Macbeast
If you don't observe it then it wont be dead or alive.
No - it will be BOTH dead and alive
My old Rover 75 1.8 k series had the eml light on and off for years, and at mot time the tester had to coax the car through the test, and it only just
got through
yet once i changed the lamba (about £30) it was a different car and sailed through its last mot while in my care!
Not sure if its true, but a headgasket failure (i had two) mucks the lamba up, so a new one was required
steve
Also, with the car at a normal hot temp, engine running the exhaust fumes smell like an eggy fart, and if it does, the cat is working
[Edited on 20/4/12 by steve m]
An emissions test at a friendly MOT station ?
I would always suspect Lambda sensor over cat..
quote:
Also, with the car at a normal hot temp, engine running the exhaust fumes smell like an eggy fart, and if it does, the cat is working
quote:
fault reads lower lambada sensor fault.
First thing is to find out if the engine is running closed loop and what signals are look coming from both hego sensors. The other thing is to
make sure the engine is running hot enough.
The voltage output from the sensors can be checked by making a tap connection into the wiring but checking by reading OBDII live data is easier
although it it won't show a sensor out of calibration.
[Edited on 20/4/12 by britishtrident]