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HomeOxygen SensorsOXYGEN SENSO |
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|  |  | | Customer Reviews: | | | Average Customer Review: ( 43 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 found the following review helpful:
Excellent Replacement Part May 09, 2010
By SoCalJim I used this part to replace the California Emissions Air Fuel Ratio Sensor on my 99 Camry V6. Dealer wanted $277 for the factory OEM replacement part, but since the original part I removed was a Denso, I thought this part is probably equivelent to the OEM replacement part. According to my code reader and the manual the bad sensor was bank 1, sensor 1, also referred to as rear sensor before the catalytic converter. The after market parts are referenced as front right or front left. It required some research, but I determined that bank 1, sensor 1 is the same as front right in the after market parts. Long story short, I installed this sensor in my Camry over two weeks ago, cleared the diagnositic codes, and check engine light has not come back on. This part saved me over $150 from the OEM raplacement part.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
RX300 didn't pass inspections until I swapped out BANK 1 SENSOR 1 Aug 09, 2011
By Margaritaville 2002 RX 300 Bank 1 Sensor 1 Replaced. Inspections passed! Worked like a charm. Jack up vehicle on passenger side. Place jackstands x2 Slide under from front. ( make sure vehicle is cold ) Locate Sensor Unplug wiring harness test with OHM meter. (mine read 0.0) (new one read 1.8) Use an O2 sensor socket with ratchet wrench. ( I gently used a breaker bar, 132K miles on vehicle)
********* don't forget the ANTI SEIZE goop (comes in package, I forgot to use it, oh well) ****************
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
big savings Jan 30, 2010
By Micah D. Cane For me this was the exact fit replacement. Local garages wanted $400.00 for the part and replacement. I bought an additional $4.00 tool and 20 minutes later it was fixed and ready for emmissions test.....
3 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Denso A/F sensor - worked Nov 23, 2009
By BAM Short and Sweet... Once I found out exactly which part I needed for my 2000 Toyota Sienna, popped the old one out and this guy fit right in. I was back driving without CEL in under 15 minutes. Saved about 60 bucks buying from Amazon.
2 of 2 found the following review helpful:
OEM part at a great price. Sep 12, 2010
By P. Wlodarczyk I bought this O2 sensor to replace on throwing codes on my wifes 2002 Toyota Highlander. Dealers get $300+ for this job, and after purchasing an O2 sensor specific wrench for $10, I wouldn't hesitate to do it again at 1/3 the cost and about 20 minutes work from start to finish. The sensor comes with a small packet of high temperature anti-sieze, so the only thing you'll lack is a wrench and some penetrating oil for the old one. I would highly suggest some PD Blast or equivalent penetrating oil to shoot the threads on the old one before attempting to unscrew it. The heat cycles these things see can get them frozen in place pretty well. The OEM part had no dielectric grease on the electrical connection but I'd suggest that too; no sense in letting connector corrosion knock out a $100 part prematurely. One more suggestion... Write down your preprogrammed radio stations and unhook your battery before doing the work. It'll help the OBD codes clear when you've buttoned up your work, and nobody likes to rethink what stations they had programmed.
See all 43 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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