Date: Mon, 25 Feb 2002 00:12:36 +0100
Reply-To: Robert Steven Fish <fish@SALZBURG.CO.AT>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Robert Steven Fish <fish@SALZBURG.CO.AT>
Subject: Re: 1987 Oxygen Sensor Wiring 2.1 liter Digifant MV engine
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Holy Mackeral!
That is some fantastic, detailed, and helpful information!
Thanks a million. I think what threw me the most about this situation, was
not only that the cable seemed strange in that it was a shielded type... but
also the really LAME way that it was connected to the oxygen sensor cable.
The female connector is present on the ECU to O2 sensor (harness) wire...
but it appears that the O2 sensor wire was just cut (ie, someone saw that
BOTH connectors were female, and freaked out and cut the wire, stripped it,
and wrapped it around the female connector... not good) and the shielding
was also just flapping in the breeze.
Come to think of it, the guy who did this lame procedure must have been
me... as I now remember doing this about 6-7 years ago. Hmmmmm... good that
humans can learn.
I'll have to locate a "double-male" type connector when I replace it this
time.
Thanks again!
RSF
<º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{
Robert S. Fish
Salzburg, Austria
1987 Wolfsburg Vanagon 2.1 Weekender
1987 Golf Cabriolet
1991 Golf
----- Original Message -----
From: "David Beierl" <dbeierl@attglobal.net>
To: "Robert Steven Fish" <fish@SALZBURG.CO.AT>
Cc: <vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM>
Sent: Sunday, February 24, 2002 11:30 PM
Subject: Re: 1987 Oxygen Sensor Wiring 2.1 liter Digifant MV engine
> At 04:09 PM 2/24/2002, Robert Steven Fish wrote:
> >The wire appears to me, to be a format typical to "shielded-type"
cable...
> >however I have never seen a shielded cable in a car before (I"ve seen it
> >often in cable TV coaxial cables, and RJ-45 network cables which need the
> >shielding from any external electromagnetic interference).
>
> Now you have. <g>
>
>
> >Anyway, this fat green "double" wire has a connector crimped onto the
middle
> >"core" wire, which is at present, rather poorly wrapped around my
existing
> >Oxygen Sensor wire.
>
> I don't understand the statement. The normal connector is a female
> spade-lug on both harness and sensor wires, each with a flat molded rubber
> boot. They are joined by a molded plastic double-male which seals the
boot
> on each end.
>
> > And the outer "shielding" wire is simply peeled back,
> >and taped up with electrical tape.
> >
> >I cannot imagine that this is the correct way to handle this.
>
> The clean way is to trim the shield braid off flush with the outer jacket,
> leaving a bit of the inner insulation sticking out. The important points
> are not to nick the inner conductor, and not to let the braid short to the
> inner conductor.
>
>
> >Does anyone know the function of the outer wire of the O2 Sensor to
Control
> >Unit wire?
>
> It's a shield -- grounded and one end, floating at the other. It shields
> the part of the sensor wire that travels bundled in the harness with other
> wires.
>
>
> >Does the OEM Oxygen Sensor come with a connector which uses BOTH of these
> >parts of the fat green wire??
>
> Nope.
>
>
> ><º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{ <º)))>{
>
> Nice fish!
>
> david
>
>
> --
> David Beierl - Providence, RI
> http://pws.prserv.net/synergy/Vanagon/
> '84 Westy "Dutiful Passage"
> '85 GL "Poor Relation"
>
>
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