What does an oxygen sensor do?

25

Asked by kconforti Jun 26, 2013 at 04:22 PM about the 2005 Honda Accord EX

Question type: Maintenance & Repair

I have a 2005 Honda Accord 4 cyl. Started stuttering today while my wife was driving it...kind of shaky on details. Took it to a mechanic and he said that codes were o2 sensor, catalytic converter, and oil pressure switch. Don't have the money to fix it all now. If I was going to prioritize which should I do first?

8 Answers

an O2 sensor is in the exhaust stream and measures the amount of oxygen present in the exhaust, sends a signal to the ECU or aka PCM and is part of what information the ECU uses to set fuel/air trim, among other things Here is the oil pressure switch. They are all important, personally I don't know which I would do. If the oil pressure switch, which is a sending unit, completely fails and you will have no oil pressure and not know

7 people found this helpful.
25

Thanks Dave. So basically I need to fix all three now?

1 people found this helpful.

'fraid so. None are any more important that the other. I know very well about money being tight these days, trust me on that one. You could skip the oil pressure switch, that is the least expensive one (they deleted a picture I had up of one, must have been a copyrighted image) but personally I would want to have mine functioning. Its a sending unit for the gauge but it's also a switch because if you lost all oil pressure it sends a signal to shut you engine off. It could save your engine from being toasted from no oil pressure with $15 part, and almost no labor, unscrew the old one and thread in the new one one, plug wires in, 15 minutes. The catalytic convertor will be the most expensive part...unless you need two or three 02 sensors. You will suffer greatly reduced mpg if you don't do the 02 sensors also. The only other suggestion I have is get a second opinion, if you don't know and trust this mechanic. If you do, them no need for that. Or have the OBD codes scanned for free at any large parts house and see if they agree. No harm in that and no cost either. Good luck kcon

1 people found this helpful.

kcon i would go with o2 sensor first,the cat reading could have been affected by the o2 readings,if your engine does not seem to rattle i would do oil sender at some other time,hope this helps

2 people found this helpful.
25

Thanks Ford. Engine hasn't been rattling -- at least I haven't noticed it the little that I drive it. Its had a bad secondary o2 sensor for a while. Replaced it about 2 - 3 years ago, then about 6 months later the other went bad. Replaced that one, then about 6 months ago it went bad again. Haven't fixed it since. Wodner if that matters?

1 people found this helpful.

done oil change today on our stream an the oil light has come on can any body help out what might have caused this problem b4 spending big money on a cheap little car

Your Answer:

Accord

Looking for a Used Accord in your area?

CarGurus has 974 nationwide Accord listings starting at $2,995.

Postal Code:

CarGurus Experts

  • #1
    JP1956
    Reputation
    6,880
  • #2
    Fredbrillo
    Reputation
    5,320
  • #3
    Jonathan Ford
    Reputation
    3,850
View All

Find great deals from top-rated dealers

Search

Related Models For Sale

Used Toyota Camry
47 Great Deals out of 1,118 listings starting at $2,500
Used Honda Civic
188 Great Deals out of 3,999 listings starting at $440
Used Toyota Corolla
132 Great Deals out of 2,268 listings starting at $103
Used Honda CR-V
192 Great Deals out of 4,984 listings starting at $440
Used Honda Accord Coupe
6 Great Deals out of 53 listings starting at $4,500
Used Nissan Altima
28 Great Deals out of 677 listings starting at $3,795
Used Dodge Charger
30 Great Deals out of 897 listings starting at $4,888
Used Honda Accord Hybrid
9 Great Deals out of 148 listings starting at $17,500
Used Lexus IS
23 Great Deals out of 426 listings starting at $4,400
Used BMW 3 Series
59 Great Deals out of 1,213 listings starting at $2,500
Used Nissan Maxima
11 Great Deals out of 198 listings starting at $1,450
Used Toyota RAV4
140 Great Deals out of 3,035 listings starting at $3,900
Used Hyundai Sonata
44 Great Deals out of 822 listings starting at $1,543

Content submitted by Users is not endorsed by CarGurus, does not express the opinions of CarGurus, and should not be considered reviewed, screened, or approved by CarGurus. Please refer to CarGurus Terms of Use. Content will be removed if CarGurus becomes aware that it violates our policies.