Orca
Well-Known Member
Personally, I wouldn't do anything based on just 1 test but that green line ("Bank 1 Sensor 2") looks somewhat suspicious to my eye. I'd run the test again, after you've driven the vehicle some miles. Even then, there are possibilities of being misled by looking at just one test. The "catalyst efficiency monitor" that I mentioned earlier in this thread could be running, disrupting the data you're analyzing. Or, if "rear fuel trim" is a real thing and at work on these vehicles, it could be causing misleading data. That's why I always recommend lots of testing. If you never see your downstream O2 sensors steadily reporting 0.7 to 0.8 volts, then you should start to be concerned, IMHO.So, @RonD (or anyone else who knows). This thread started making me wonder about my 97 F150, 4.6l. Bought it used, now gas 150k miles and original O2 sensors. So I just went out to the driveway and started it up, let it warm up while I got the OBDII adapter plugged in and connected to my phone. Here is a screenshot of my O2 sensor voltages from the Torque pro app. If I understand your post, this shows that my cats are nearing end of life and one upstream sensor is getting flaky. Is that correct?
I don't see anything blatantly wrong with your "upstream" sensors (red and blue lines). They may be getting a little "lethargic", but it's hard to tell and Torque Pro runs on Android, which can cause uncontrollable perturbations in the output of fast-changing PIDs like upstream O2 sensor voltages. Of course, if they're as old as they seem to be, it's probably time for some new ones.
The "downstream"/"S2" sensors monitor the catalytic converter output and are not supposed to be "switching". If you start seeing one do that constantly (versus doing it for short durations), over multiple tests, it probably means that your catalytic converter is losing effectiveness, causing the normal, constant, closed-loop, PCM-induced fuel mix alterations (that are quite visible in the "upstream"/"S1" sensors) to start showing up "downstream".I'm interested in the answer too. The only thing I'd instinctively react to on that image is the Bank 2 downstream sensor holding a near flatline - makes me wonder if the sensor is aging and not switching properly.
It is.I thought that was the good one.
