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1996 850 GLT O2 Sensor Replacement Attempt

Help, Advice and DIY Tutorials on Volvo's P80 platform cars -- Volvo's 1990s "bread and butter" cars -- powered by the ubiquitous and durable Volvo inline 5-cylinder engine.

1992 - 1997 850, including 850 R, 850 T-5R, 850 T-5, 850 GLT
1997 - 2000 S70, S70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70, V70 AWD
1997 - 2000 V70-XC
1997 - 2004 C70

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osmium
Posts: 208
Joined: 2 July 2009
Year and Model: 96 850 GLT
Location: Nashua, NH

1996 850 GLT O2 Sensor Replacement Attempt

Post by osmium »

I've had the 850 for almost 6 years and put about 72k mile on it.

Recently, I got a check engine light and read a P0141 code. Erased it and it's come back. Since I've owned the car, I haven't had any of the O2 sensors replaced.

Before buying the replacement Bosch sensor, I decided to make sure I could get the bolts off the plate below the O2 sensor. (Car's been in New England for its entire life, so bolt are sometimes tough to get off.) So I PB blasted them and waited a while. When I came back to try an loosen them, two turned pretty easy but never come out. They just keep spinning in place. Are what's holding the thread something like a PEM nut and is just turning?

-os
1996 850 GLT 262k miles (gone :( )

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1999 Honda Civic (gone)
1996 850 GLT (gone, no more Volvos :( )
2000 Buick Park Avenue (gone)
2005 Honda Odyssey (gone)
2013 Lexus ES350 (replaced Volvo 850)
2021 Honda Pilot

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osman
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Post by osman »

The heat shield? Im confused. You shouldnt need to remove it, O2 codes are usually a vacuum leak or lean/rich condition.
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osmium
Posts: 208
Joined: 2 July 2009
Year and Model: 96 850 GLT
Location: Nashua, NH

Post by osmium »

osman wrote:The heat shield? Im confused. You shouldnt need to remove it, O2 codes are usually a vacuum leak or lean/rich condition.

Thanks for the reply.

I thought the P0141 code meant the rear O2 sensor was bad.

But, your reply reminded me that about a year ago I got a code (don't recall what) that wound up being the elbow in the intake manifold. I replaced the vacuum tubing and rerouted it. Turns out that the end that connected to the flame trap assembly had slipped off.

Put it back on. Will see if the code returns.

Thanks for your help. Won't have to deal with those bolts right now.
1996 850 GLT 262k miles (gone :( )

Image

1999 Honda Civic (gone)
1996 850 GLT (gone, no more Volvos :( )
2000 Buick Park Avenue (gone)
2005 Honda Odyssey (gone)
2013 Lexus ES350 (replaced Volvo 850)
2021 Honda Pilot

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misha
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Year and Model: '97 850 2.5 20v
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Post by misha »

osmium wrote:...I thought the P0141 code meant the rear O2 sensor was bad...
Yes...the rear one.
'97 850 2.5 20v / fully equipped / Motronic 4.4 from the factory / upgraded with S,V,C,XC70 instrument cluster / polar white wagon
History of Volvos in the family:
'71 144 S
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'78 244 DL
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draser
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Post by draser »

That's an o2 sensor heater code.
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draser
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Post by draser »

So if you have or can get an ohm meter measure sensor heater resistance at the connector. If you read some low resistane there then sensor is good.
2005 Volvo S60 2.5T, Zimmerman/Akebono brakes
2012 Honda Accord, EBC slotted rotors

osmium
Posts: 208
Joined: 2 July 2009
Year and Model: 96 850 GLT
Location: Nashua, NH

Post by osmium »

draser wrote:So if you have or can get an ohm meter measure sensor heater resistance at the connector. If you read some low resistane there then sensor is good.
Got the vacuum hose back on.

Check engine light came back on couple days later. - Found two codes:P0141 and P0136.

I take it these point to the rear sensor.
1996 850 GLT 262k miles (gone :( )

Image

1999 Honda Civic (gone)
1996 850 GLT (gone, no more Volvos :( )
2000 Buick Park Avenue (gone)
2005 Honda Odyssey (gone)
2013 Lexus ES350 (replaced Volvo 850)
2021 Honda Pilot

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