Date: Mon, 1 Jul 1996 08:37:47 -0700 (PDT)
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@vanagon.com>
From: eugp@uclink3.berkeley.edu (Eugene C. Palmer)
Subject: 02 sensor
Some folks expressed an interest in the 02 sensor thingy. I'll try to
oblige here.
>>I'm using the O2 sensor on anything I run I decided. Might as well know
>>whats going on in that exhaust since I went out and paid the big money.
>>Kind of wish I had built the meter myself, but I didn't know how at the time.
>
> Uhh, how? I thought about this and didn't really know how, but I
>could use one of those goodies.
I thought I had the old posts for this hanging around, but now I can't find
them. Maybe they're on the computer at work. Basically you hook up a
generic 02 sensor in the exhaust path, usually one that has a heating
element in it and needs 12VDC. Then you measure DC volts with a voltmeter
up front. My expensive Haltech meter has 16 led's, but all it is is a box
with leds that measure DC volts.
This from another guy.............
>I got a little side pipe with M18 threads welded to one of the two J
>pipes, bought a normal Bosch oxygen sensor ($36.00) and ran one wire from
>it to the dashboard where I installed some cheapo digital voltmeter from
>Radio Shack. I found in a Bosch FI book a calibration curve (voltage vs.
>lambda) fora Bosch Oxygen sensor. SO I know at what voltage reading I'm
>running at lamda = 1. Higher Voltages mean rich, lower ones lean.
>I used this information to tune my FI system, like setting CO screw on
>the AFM.....
>It works great so far, but I'm wondering how I coud convert the voltage
>reading into a direct lambda reading. Did you buy a gauge which can do that?
(I brazed the nut on at the collector merge)
And from another guy..............
>Just a word of wisdom to those of you playing around with your O2
>sensor meters... be sure to install them (the O2 sensor) BEFORE the
>catalytic converter (if so equipped). Otherwise, all you are
>reading is diddly-squat in terms of meaningful data.
>
>2 great books on O2 sensors/fuel injection are (info posted earlier
>but what the heck):
>
>Fuel Injection and Engine Management by Charles Probst
>
>How To Tune and Modify Bosch Fuel Injection by Ben Watson
If I find any more past posts, I'll get back to you, I'm sure someone had
the voltmeter readings and their conversions somewhere. Maybe I'll have to
get the book.
Eug,
'71