01Steeda said:
SVTTech, can u explain the vacuum leak theory a bit for me. I understand what your saying just not sure why that would effect the 02's.
jstreet0204 said:
Not sure when he will log back in but I'll answer for him. The o2 sensors only have a range of a/f ratios of 14:1 to 15:1 any thing that would cause a lean condition (vacuum leak) leaner than 15:1 would show voltage very close to 0 volts.
CORRECT!!!! I can tell Jstreet knows his EEC
Now I am going to give a lenthy drawn out boring explaination nobody will read
well the 02 sensors provide feedback to the pcm on the amount of oxygen in the exhaust.. thsi allows to computer to compensate by adding or subtracting fuel to the base mixture.
Now a vaccum leak allows unmetered air to enter the intake without being metered by the MAF sensor. This is cause the PCM to add to little fuel to the mixture becuase the maf readings are lower than the actual amount of air entering the engine.
to compensate for this the PCM adds fuel to the mixture and when it gets to +25 percent it sets the p0171,174 codes.
Now about the 02 readings.
Air will find the point of least resistance to enter the motor, at high vacumm closed throttle this is thru a vacumm leak like a bad intake gasket or vac line and at open throttle this is thru the throttle body. This is why vacuum leaks effect idle and not WOT operation.
The stock narrow band sensors can only read mixtures near 14.7.1 IF it is WAY lean or WAY rich it can read 0 or near zero voltage. One way to tell if this is vacumm leak realated is to watch live data and rev the motor up, if you start to get a reading from the o2 sensors at higher RPM's then it's most likely a vacumm leak simply because vacumm is low at higher RPM/LOAD and the throttle body is open so air will find the point of least resistance to enter the motor.
You can not tell if there is a vacumm leak by running the engine with a guage on it and reading if the vacuum is normal. For one the amount of vacumm produced by a eninge depends a lot on the cam specs.
Plus the engine continuously produces vacumm while it's running and the throttle blade is closed, so a small to medium sized leak will not effect vacumm readings. If you had a leak SO large that it overcame the capacity of the engine to produce vacumm then it would not run.
So using a guage to find a small vacumm leak is just not going to be very effective.
I am starting to wonder how accurate the info they are giving you is. because any tuner should know this stuff