P 0420 code

I Bleed Ford Blue

5 Year Member
Feb 13, 2017
416
121
73
North Olmsted OH
For those of you that have long tube headers on your S 550, did you get a cat inefficiency code and did it appear right away after header install. I installed a set of long tubes on mine back in Feb and all was fine until today. I got a P 0420 code for cat inefficiency after putting approx 120 miles on the car since install.
 
If you're running green cats I don't understand why it threw a light. If your running what is commonly referred to as "high flow" or "race cats" it could be a couple of things. The first thing I would try would be 02 sensor spacers, search Amazon for Universal O2 Sensor Spacer Adapter Isolator m18. These will pull the sensors back some and essentially desensitize the 02 sensor. They work on our S197 car. I have read a lot of your posts and if I'm right, I don't think you run your car really hard. Sometimes the guts in those small cats overheat and clog up the exhaust, but that's mostly on boosted cars running high horsepower. If it were me, I would clear the code and run the spacers and that will probably eliminate the problem. If it doesn't, your only out a few bucks.
 
I took a peek under the car and I have to replace the band clamps aft of the x-pipe. Apparently they are one time use because now my exhaust is hanging down and leaking at the joint. Just to be clear, the factory exhaust pipes are 2.5" correct? I want to fix this first and wait and see if the code comes back.
 
Bought a new set of butt joint band clamps and a pair of the O2 extenders from amazon. Will try that first and if it works, then great, it will save me a few hundred on a custom tune to fix the CEL.

I may still get a tune done to get as much power out of my setup as I can. Most aftermarket open element CAI's with tune claim mid 30's rwhp gain, ford only claims 23 rwhp and I also have an 87 mm throttle body with it so I know ford left a lot on the table. Throw in long tube headers on top of everything else and there has got to be more in there.
 
Last edited:
Just a thought here because I'm not familiar with 420 on these cars. There are a number code strategies where the number of miles you've put on the car doesn't matter. Some situations to pull some codes is based on cycling from and back to KOEO. If after so many cycles the ECU can't solve the problem with the programmed strategy it determines the problem is beyond it's ability to solve and throws the code. It's a good solution to prevent sending people to a shop for a problem that will solve itself but it sucks for intermittent problems and weekend drivers. A good example of where the strategy is useful and time wise fits your pulling the code is during the seasonal changeover of gas from winter to summer. Depending on how often a driver fuels their car and the number of different stations they're using they could be flipping back and forth on fuels that require different A/F ratios. The ECU doesn't evaluate fuels. Just their effects. I don't have the emissions diagnosis manual here to verify this for your car so it's just something to consider.