O2 Sensor

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

Triv

Junior Member
Joined
Jan 24, 2017
Posts
19
Reaction score
4
Location
South Jersey
First Name
Joe
Truck Year
1986
Truck Model
k10 Silverado
Engine Size
350
Put new headers on my '86 Silverado and they do not have a port for the O2 sensor. I believe this is what has been triggering my check engine light since it started when I made the switch. I trashed the sensor and the connection to the wiring harness has just been dangling ever since. Any way to stop this other than tapping into the new headers with a new O2 sensor?
 

yevgenievich

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 1, 2014
Posts
4,789
Reaction score
3,327
Location
Texas
First Name
Viktor
Truck Year
sad
Truck Model
very sad
Engine Size
less sad
Put new headers on my '86 Silverado and they do not have a port for the O2 sensor. I believe this is what has been triggering my check engine light since it started when I made the switch. I trashed the sensor and the connection to the wiring harness has just been dangling ever since. Any way to stop this other than tapping into the new headers with a new O2 sensor?
with headers should install a heated O2 sensor.
 

Snoots

Full Access Member
Joined
Jan 23, 2013
Posts
8,185
Reaction score
16,027
Location
Georgia
First Name
Roger
Truck Year
1973
Truck Model
Jimmy Sierra
Engine Size
350
You could install a bung at the exhaust crossover and extend the O2 wires.
Go to the bone yard with a hacksaw and wire cutters and get the O2 sensor, the bung and connector with wires. A good welder can install it.
Just my 2 cents.
 

gpmorgan

Full Access Member
Joined
Nov 9, 2013
Posts
562
Reaction score
105
Location
Tupelo Ms.
First Name
greg
Truck Year
1992
Truck Model
1500
Engine Size
632
I bought a collector with the bung in it.
 

yevgenievich

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 1, 2014
Posts
4,789
Reaction score
3,327
Location
Texas
First Name
Viktor
Truck Year
sad
Truck Model
very sad
Engine Size
less sad
OK, class is in session. Please enlighten me on needing a heated O2 sensor with headers.
Without heated O2 the ecm will stay in open loop longer or forever if the O2 sensor never gets hot enough to operating temp. Headers often move O2 sensor further out
 

1987 GMC Jimmy

Automobile Hoarder
Joined
Jan 23, 2016
Posts
5,848
Reaction score
2,387
Location
Mississippi
First Name
Jesse
Truck Year
1987
Truck Model
V1500 Jimmy
Engine Size
350
Without heated O2 the ecm will stay in open loop longer or forever if the O2 sensor never gets hot enough to operating temp. Headers often move O2 sensor further out

I think people are starting to negate this in practice, at least on this website. I thought the same, but a couple people who ran the one wire sensor with headers, and then switched to the three wire said that it didn't make any difference for them. They didn't have check engine lights before or after, and the truck didn't have any trouble getting into closed loop before. They said it ran exactly the same either way. The only logical thing that I can think of to bridge these two stances is maybe if the bung is on the collector it can heat up better, but it can't if you install it further down the line. I don't have any data to back either side up, or my hypothesis there, but the OP said he has an '86 truck. There shouldn't be an O2 sensor unless it's a CCC California truck, it's been converted to TBI, or it's an '87.
 
Last edited:

74propu

Full Access Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2015
Posts
687
Reaction score
242
Location
florida
First Name
austin
Truck Year
1974 1980 1986
Truck Model
c10s/b c10 s/b c10l/b
Engine Size
5.3 / ?/454 tbi
I have long tube headers on my 86 with a 95 big block . I had to put the o2 sensor in my passenger side collector . then had to put a heated o2 sensor in to get it out of open loop . with headers it is moved to far out and only have 1/2 the exhaust heat going over it . if you move it back to the x pipe it is even further from the engine and the heat .
 

smoothandlow84

I'd rather be draggin' frame
Joined
Jan 4, 2015
Posts
2,121
Reaction score
784
Location
Arizona
First Name
Steve
Truck Year
1984 Frame...87 motor and 700r trans
Truck Model
1500 r10 pavement scraper
Engine Size
350 TBI
OK, class is in session. Please enlighten me on needing a heated O2 sensor with headers.
Nothing...a heater o2 sensor is a waste of time. Some people have argued that it leans out the mixture....blah...blah. I drank that Kool-aid, bought and installed and wired in the heated o2 sensor......and it did absolutely NOTHING



No open loop, no check engine light and runs fine.
 

yevgenievich

Full Access Member
Joined
Mar 1, 2014
Posts
4,789
Reaction score
3,327
Location
Texas
First Name
Viktor
Truck Year
sad
Truck Model
very sad
Engine Size
less sad
If you do not have issue with open loop and no check engine code then there is no need for the heated o2 sensor. But if starting with not having one at all, it is a safer choice to buy a heated one vs finding out that in that particular application the single wire O2 is not good enough. In a lot of cases, installing a non heated O2 sensor far away in the collector of the long tube headers can cause problems
Nothing...a heater o2 sensor is a waste of time. Some people have argued that it leans out the mixture....blah...blah. I drank that Kool-aid, bought and installed and wired in the heated o2 sensor......and it did absolutely NOTHING



No open loop, no check engine light and runs fine.
 

75gmck25

Full Access Member
Joined
Oct 13, 2016
Posts
2,038
Reaction score
1,833
Location
Northern Virginia
First Name
Bruce
Truck Year
1975
Truck Model
K25 Camper Special TH350 NP203
Engine Size
5.7
Using a heated O2 sensor lets you install it just about anywhere in the pipe, since you don't have to worry about it getting hot enough to work properly. This is sometimes an advantage, but is not always needed.

I have a wideband digital AFR meter, with the heated sensor installed in the exhaust pipe that runs right under my foot, and it works very well. YMMV.

Bruce
 

Forum statistics

Threads
42,124
Posts
909,616
Members
33,617
Latest member
dougli1
Top