Not all O2 sensors are alike

Not all O2 sensors are alike

Author
Discussion

wcdeane

Original Poster:

210 posts

263 months

Friday 4th October 2002
quotequote all
I had been fighting a serious drivability problem with my SE for several weeks, and one of the first things I did was replace the O2 sensor. I didn’t want to pay the $150 – $200 USD price for an authentic Lotus OE sensor, so I fitted my car with a BOSCH 15704 sensor. This is a 4 lead sensor that costs about $50 USD. When you use this sensor on an SE you need to swap a couple of the wire leads, but for the most part, it’s a quick, no-brainer project. So anyway, the O2 sensor improved the way my car ran, but it still had a bit of a stumble on acceleration at about 2500 - 3000 RPM. The engine would also occasionally stall during warm up and at intersections.

To make a long story short, after weeks of analysis and consternation I ended up replacing the BOSCH sensor with an authentic Lotus OE sensor. The car now runs the way it is supposed to – which is AWESOME ! I am now one very happy Lotus driver.

Moral of the story?...some authentic Lotus OE parts, like the 02 sensor, just might be worth the extra cost. My humble observation.

Walt

wonderman

17 posts

265 months

Saturday 5th October 2002
quotequote all
I had the same trouble with drivability and stalling including a pesky engine light that came on from time to time. I did some research into O2 sensors and decided on an AC Delco 4 wire unit that fit the harness exactly. Yes 2 wires had to be switched but it ran perfect after that and has been ever since. My technician confirmed my findings and I saved aprox $120. Sometimes it works.

RyanSheldon

73 posts

265 months

Friday 18th October 2002
quotequote all
I just replaced mine with BOSCH 0-258-003-913, which is what was in the car when I got it. I do not know if this is the stock O2 sensor, I did have to rewire, but that was easy. So far, so good, but I need to drive the car more to determine if this helps. Do you have the AC Delco part number available in case this does not work out?
Thanks,
Ryan

cnh1990

3,035 posts

264 months

Friday 18th October 2002
quotequote all
I have had mixed results from non OEM O2 sensors.
Some say after much expermenting they work somewhat.
There is a limit, value, and frustration factor we must put on our own labor. This is one of those questions of how much messing around is worth trying to save a few dollars.
Calvin with OEM O2

wonderman

17 posts

265 months

Saturday 19th October 2002
quotequote all
The AC Delco part # is AFS 95 , at least that is what it was at the dealer in Canada. I know for sure that it cured my problem because I was getting an engine light and the code was O2 related. Now the O2 is heating up before I start the engine to maintain a constant temp and the code is gone. Definitely the right sensor. Running 100 %

SwedishSurgeon

96 posts

261 months

Monday 4th November 2002
quotequote all
Oh the bloody O2 Sensor problem... not all O2 sensors are alike. When I brought my '87 Esprit I had problems passing strict emission standards. Whether or not the one that was in the car was correct I did'nt know. This seems to be top secret. No mention in any Bosch publications for this sensor. I played with fuel mixture adjustments with no luck so I bit the bullet and brought one from S&J sports cars saying this was for '88 and up. Since my car is an '87 but uses the same system, I put it in... Bosch part number 0-258-003-032. After resetting the fuel mix, per instructions of the Bible, I passed emissions however my exhaust runs
very hot. I checked the timing which is spot on, but wonder why my exhaust manifold back to the turbo glows at night. I played with the mixture again,since I thought it was running too lean, going to a bit richer as I know this could result for the same problem, {too much unburnt fuel} causing this problem. I'm told this is normal after a hard run however I don't have to run her hard and I still get this. Has anyone out there experienced this same problem? When I played with the fuel mixture, I used a dwell meter reading from the frequency valve to get readings and not guessing in the dark.
Robert

cnh1990

3,035 posts

264 months

Monday 4th November 2002
quotequote all
My manifold glows red if I run mine hard. It also did it one time when a lean condition was induced by a low battery conditions as my EFI sensors failed as the battery died. That was not a good day for me when that happened, backfiring, etc. Robert are the cam gears aligned? I'm sure they are as you changed the belt recently didn't you? I have seen the belt jump a tooth or so. I don't know much about the K Jetronic system, all you 86-88 car guys speak up on this subject.
Calvin 90 SE

SwedishSurgeon

96 posts

261 months

Wednesday 6th November 2002
quotequote all
Calvin,
When I replaced my timing belt I checked the marks according to the Bible before I removed it. Everything was correct on that point. Also from experience, if the timing is just one tooth off, a car will not run right. Before my car was running too rich failing emissions, I couldn't get the correct part # of the OE sensor at the time so I brought one from Steve @ S&J.
Steve did say this was for '88 and up, which the '88's used the same system as mine. Too lean or rich will cause this however I cannot seem to find that "happy
medium " in between. I have been told there is a distributer up grade, I do get some backfire on decel
which is from an exhaust leak or too much unburned fuel. Since our exhaust sniffer at work crapped out... I have no real way to check the emissions unless my boss breaks down and buys a 5 gas which we really need!
Otherwise, the car runs perfect in everyway. When I first brought it, it wouldn't light at the turn of the key, but I straightened that out. When I take it out next year I know someone with a Snap-On engine flush system for cleaning fuel injection systems and will give that a try.
Robert

cnh1990

3,035 posts

264 months

Wednesday 6th November 2002
quotequote all
I don't know much about that Bosch system. Are the injectors spraying alright instead of dripping big drops? I think you can just test with a hand pump. Hopefully you don't have a manifold leak that causes your O2 to misread and dumps mpre fuel in to compensate. When you changed the belt did you adjust valves? You probably did a compression and leak down test right? I know you like G cars but it would be so much nicer to hook a lap top to read what the engine is doing. Maybe a good winter project if the storage place lets you work on the car. I need to get my other garage built soon so I have more room. Tony has nice set up with the easy lift. I need one of those.
Calvin