MLCMK Posted April 17, 2016 Share Posted April 17, 2016 Hi all I have a question on how close the voltage values for Bank 1 position 1 and Bank 2 position 1 should be when the car is warmed up and running. I had the cruse control set for 60 mph and took the snapshot below of the readings and noticed the Bank 1 voltage was significantly lower than the Bank 2 number From what I understand the low voltage will make the ecu think that bank 1 is running lean and make it over compensate with extra fuel Am I on the right track or miles off? Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
karlh Posted April 17, 2016 Share Posted April 17, 2016 Are you sure you're measuring the voltage of the air-fuel sensor located before the cats? Those are wide-band sensors, and output a voltage of approximately 1.5 volts at lambda = 1. The voltages you show look like a narrow-band sensor, the kind located after cat 1. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tricky-Ricky Posted April 17, 2016 Share Posted April 17, 2016 (edited) O2 sensor 1 of bank 1 and 2 are used by the ECU to monitor for the correct air fuel mix, whereas sensors 2 of bank 1 and 2 are the cat monitors, and use a much reduced signal variation and cycle, and in normal circumstances not used to monitor fuel mix, and so will show a completely different reading to sensors 1. However on looking at your gauges again it would seem that it is reading sensors 1, a so it would seem that one sensor is reading low, which would indeed prompt the ECU to add more fuel, Does that reading change much at various RPM/load? if not then that a fair indication that the sensor is dead. Edited April 17, 2016 by Tricky-Ricky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MLCMK Posted April 17, 2016 Author Share Posted April 17, 2016 Are you sure you're measuring the voltage of the air-fuel sensor located before the cats? Those are wide-band sensors, and output a voltage of approximately 1.5 volts at lambda = 1. The voltages you show look like a narrow-band sensor, the kind located after cat 1. Hi Karlh, I just double checked and these readings are from the sensors before the cat (I looked at the PIDs) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MLCMK Posted April 17, 2016 Author Share Posted April 17, 2016 (edited) O2 sensor 1 of bank 1 and 2 are used by the ECU to monitor for the correct air fuel mix, whereas sensors 2 of bank 1 and 2 are the cat monitors, and use a much reduced signal variation and cycle, and in normal circumstances not used to monitor fuel mix, and so will show a completely different reading to sensors 1. However on looking at your gauges again it would seem that it is reading sensors 1, a so it would seem that one sensor is reading low, which would indeed prompt the ECU to add more fuel, Does that reading change much at various RPM/load? if not then that a fair indication that the sensor is dead. Thanks Tricky-Ricky, below is a snapshot from a bit later in the run, decreased revs and speed. There is some fluctuation on both sensors but the blue bank 1 sensor always reads lower than the yellow bank 2 Voltage Voltage switching is clearer to see in the below Edited April 17, 2016 by MLCMK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tricky-Ricky Posted April 17, 2016 Share Posted April 17, 2016 (edited) There is always is a difference between O2 readings from one bank to the other, and now I have seen that the sensors are cycling as they should, I would say that now looks OK to me, similar to some of the logs I have taken from the std ECU. But its worth keeping an eye, as it could be a lazy sensor or on its way out, but I wouldn't worry too much for now, it will throw a CEL should the sensor go down. Edited April 17, 2016 by Tricky-Ricky Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MLCMK Posted April 17, 2016 Author Share Posted April 17, 2016 There is always is a difference between O2 readings from one bank to the other, and now I have seen that the sensors are cycling as they should, I would say that now looks OK to me, similar to some of the logs I have taken from the std ECU.But its worth keeping an eye, as it could be a lazy sensor or on its way out, but I wouldn't worry too much for now, it will throw a CEL should the sensor go down. Excellent, thanks for your help Tricky-Ricky. I will keep a eye on it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Sam Mcgoo Posted April 17, 2016 Share Posted April 17, 2016 That is normal on the 350. For some reason Bank 1 sensor voltage is always about about 50% of bank 2. When fault finding, I found it easier to look at the Bank 1 vs Bank 2 Fuel trims. This will show you if one bank is running richer/leaner than the other and trying to compensate. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MLCMK Posted April 19, 2016 Author Share Posted April 19, 2016 That is normal on the 350. For some reason Bank 1 sensor voltage is always about about 50% of bank 2.When fault finding, I found it easier to look at the Bank 1 vs Bank 2 Fuel trims. This will show you if one bank is running richer/leaner than the other and trying to compensate. Thanks Sam I'll build a dashboard to check the fuel trims and add it into dash command Cheers Jason Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
karlh Posted April 30, 2016 Share Posted April 30, 2016 Are you sure you're measuring the voltage of the air-fuel sensor located before the cats? Those are wide-band sensors, and output a voltage of approximately 1.5 volts at lambda = 1. The voltages you show look like a narrow-band sensor, the kind located after cat 1. Hi Karlh, I just double checked and these readings are from the sensors before the cat (I looked at the PIDs) After reading your reply I obtained a scan tool and checked my 2005 Z. I got the same readings that you did; approximately 0.3 V for bank 1 and 0.6 V for bank 2. It appears that Nissan is using PID $1B to report these values. PID $1B is designed for older, narrow-band O2 sensors, and reports voltages between 0 V and 1.275 V. The pre-cat sensors in our cars are wide-band, and output approximately 1.5 V at lambda = 1. If our readings are the true values then both banks, and especially bank 1, are running very rich. I suspect Nissan has scaled the wide-band readings to fit within the narrow-band range and that 0.3 V and 0.6 V represent lambda = 1 for banks 1 and 2 respectively. Unfortunately, I cannot find anything in the Service Manual to confirm this. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MLCMK Posted April 30, 2016 Author Share Posted April 30, 2016 Are you sure you're measuring the voltage of the air-fuel sensor located before the cats? Those are wide-band sensors, and output a voltage of approximately 1.5 volts at lambda = 1. The voltages you show look like a narrow-band sensor, the kind located after cat 1. Hi Karlh, I just double checked and these readings are from the sensors before the cat (I looked at the PIDs) After reading your reply I obtained a scan tool and checked my 2005 Z. I got the same readings that you did; approximately 0.3 V for bank 1 and 0.6 V for bank 2. It appears that Nissan is using PID $1B to report these values. PID $1B is designed for older, narrow-band O2 sensors, and reports voltages between 0 V and 1.275 V. The pre-cat sensors in our cars are wide-band, and output approximately 1.5 V at lambda = 1. If our readings are the true values then both banks, and especially bank 1, are running very rich. I suspect Nissan has scaled the wide-band readings to fit within the narrow-band range and that 0.3 V and 0.6 V represent lambda = 1 for banks 1 and 2 respectively. Unfortunately, I cannot find anything in the Service Manual to confirm this. Thanks for confirming you see the same readings as I do, I'm keeping an eye on mine now on a regular basis . Something I found about mine recently is that it is a decat (didn't think to check that when I bought the car!), just thought the sound was normal for a cobra system. You live and learn. I think you are right with the Nissan scaling, it's too much of a coincidence that both cars have identical readings. Cheers Jason Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tricky-Ricky Posted May 1, 2016 Share Posted May 1, 2016 Pretty sure that the lambda sensors on the Z are 2v wide-bands rather than 5v, that why you end up with an odd reading on some loggers/diagnostic machines and dashboard apps, but the higher reading on one back is normal. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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