Wideband sensor after the cat

Fullboogie

King of the Ski - OG Jr.
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Posts
8,667
Reaction score
3,243
Location
Houston
How far off will the readings be? I've heard about a half point - does that sound right?

I'm having some exhaust work done on my car right now, and there appears to be no room for a third O2 bung anywhere before the cats, so it looks like my only options is after the cat. I've got an offroad H that I will be running too, but on occasion (inspection) I put the factory setup in there and would like to retain my 02 readings - sometimes it takes a while to get it back on the lift to swap pipes.

So - half point leaner after the factory cats?
 

JeremyH

3V Fuel Guru
Joined
Jan 10, 2009
Posts
20,857
Reaction score
206
Location
Virginia Beach
The point of a wideband is to have an accurate a/f reading, don't even bother if its after the cat. You want it as close to the header collector as you can get it. Its hard to believe there isnt any room, I wouldn't go off an offset from someone else's setup.
 
Last edited:

Rynez06

Member
Joined
Nov 2, 2011
Posts
53
Reaction score
0
How far off will the readings be? I've heard about a half point - does that sound right?

I'm having some exhaust work done on my car right now, and there appears to be no room for a third O2 bung anywhere before the cats, so it looks like my only options is after the cat. I've got an offroad H that I will be running too, but on occasion (inspection) I put the factory setup in there and would like to retain my 02 readings - sometimes it takes a while to get it back on the lift to swap pipes.

So - half point leaner after the factory cats?
to be completely honest... i on my dyno i have put the o2 before and after the cats and had no difference in readings, that being said i use a high quality autronic NTK sensor on the dyno.. the only time i see major differences in af is when the cats are clogged or becoming clogged...
 

TexasBlownV8

Formerly TexasBlownV6
Joined
Apr 4, 2008
Posts
5,019
Reaction score
95
Location
Central Texas
If you're using cats for inspection, just dont get into it as hard. Or leave the widebands out during that time.
 

Fullboogie

King of the Ski - OG Jr.
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Posts
8,667
Reaction score
3,243
Location
Houston
I knew it would be a touchy subject. I'm having some exhaust work done right now (removing the factory X section and having an H installed) and though I'd have the guy weld a bung in there while it's on the lift. Figured it couldn't hurt as long as it could be installed in the proper location - if I don't want to use it, I can plug it. But he's having a lot of trouble finding a spot before the cat, on either side, where there is enough room. Might have to scrap the idea...
 

01yellerCobra

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2011
Posts
2,230
Reaction score
160
Location
San Diego, CA
When I first put the headers on I put the wideband after the cats until I could get to an exhaust shop to weld in a bung. There was about a 1 point difference between before and after moving the sensor.
 

BruceH

BBB Big Bore Boss 322
Joined
Sep 13, 2009
Posts
13,810
Reaction score
21
Location
Pacific Northwest
I have mine after the cat. The wideband used when I dyno is consistantly .3 leaner from the tailpipe vs before the cat. When driving around the af readings are fairly close to what they should be. I monitor a/f and fuel trims all the time with interceptor gauges.
 

JeremyH

3V Fuel Guru
Joined
Jan 10, 2009
Posts
20,857
Reaction score
206
Location
Virginia Beach
This is exactly my point, your going to get guys saying there is no difference or .5 or 1 full point difference, everyone will have a different result. So why risk it? Put it where it supposed to go to get the most accurate reading. My 2 cents.
 
Last edited:

JeremyH

3V Fuel Guru
Joined
Jan 10, 2009
Posts
20,857
Reaction score
206
Location
Virginia Beach
If your looking for a good spot to put it throw up a picture of your exhaust setup. And on a side note, your still running cats?... lol
 

bigray327

Senior Member
Joined
Apr 20, 2007
Posts
4,452
Reaction score
100
Location
League City, Texas
I agree with not doing it if you can't do it right. I'm a little perplexed about there not being room. My one-day-a-year inspection pipe is custom shortened for use with the long tubes, and there's plenty of room.
 

Fullboogie

King of the Ski - OG Jr.
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Posts
8,667
Reaction score
3,243
Location
Houston
If your looking for a good spot to put it throw up a picture of your exhaust setup. And on a side note, your still running cats?... lol

Inspections in Houston have gotten very California-like. CAI? Fail. Offroad H? Fail. Aftermarket cats? Fail.

I basically have to return my intake and exhaust to stock every year to pass. That's why I want to get my wideband in my factory pipe. Keep in mind, this is a 5.4, so the clearance problems are different than on a GT...
 

BruceH

BBB Big Bore Boss 322
Joined
Sep 13, 2009
Posts
13,810
Reaction score
21
Location
Pacific Northwest
This is exactly my point, your going to get guys saying there is no difference or .5 or 1 full point difference, everyone will have a different result. So why risk it? Put it where it supposed to go to get the most accurate reading. My 2 cents.

I do alot of things that smart people suggest I don't do, lol. There are some variables to think about. Stoichiometric in the tune matching the pump blend, the precision of a $40 Bosch sensor with a $100 controller, if all the cylinders are getting the same charge, you see where I'm going.

I'm not saying it's the best way to do it but it is better than nothing. Mine ended up there when I took it over to a friends house for welding. It's pretty hard to bitch about a favor. I could of taken the h pipe off and had it redone but I tried it out and it provides a good reference for me.
 

JeremyH

3V Fuel Guru
Joined
Jan 10, 2009
Posts
20,857
Reaction score
206
Location
Virginia Beach
I do alot of things that smart people suggest I don't do, lol. There are some variables to think about. Stoichiometric in the tune matching the pump blend, the precision of a $40 Bosch sensor with a $100 controller, if all the cylinders are getting the same charge, you see where I'm going.

I'm not saying it's the best way to do it but it is better than nothing. Mine ended up there when I took it over to a friends house for welding. It's pretty hard to bitch about a favor. I could of taken the h pipe off and had it redone but I tried it out and it provides a good reference for me.


I agree with alot of things you do Bruce, but not this one lol, its one of those things that you should do right or not at all imho. Im sure you felt more comfortable doing it on your own car since you verified the offset and tune your own car, but theres just uneeded risk for the average guy wanting an accurate wideband reading as well as a spot where the tuner will read when tuning the car.

Also the time it takes for the wideband to respond is delayed a bit moving it back which I have seen first hand. Obviously we arent reading individual runners here and cant account for bad fuel etc, as always shit happens, but why put yourself in a position to get a less than idea reading? My 2 cents :highfive:
 
Last edited:

Fullboogie

King of the Ski - OG Jr.
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Posts
8,667
Reaction score
3,243
Location
Houston
It appears the shop was able to finagle the sensor into the driver's pipe above the cat, but it's going to be a beotch to install/remove the sensor. In any case, this thread has certainly been informative and confirmed my understanding of sensor placement.
 

Vapour Trails

The Renaissance Man
Joined
Sep 17, 2008
Posts
2,773
Reaction score
41
Location
Winnipeg, MB, Canada
My sensor is after the cat and reads similarly to when the car was tuned. My car was tuned by a guy with a M.Sc in Engineering that teaches courses at the local university and holds NHRA records. I asked him about the placement of the sensor and he wasn't concerned at all by it being after the cat by less than a foot and I wasn't in any position to contest his knowledge or experience.

No sensor/gauge combo that is only a couple of hundred bucks is that accurate anyway.
 

OneQwkStang

Improving the Breed
Joined
May 17, 2011
Posts
1,134
Reaction score
0
Location
Ibiza, Spain
My sensor was welded in before the cat because that was where the install instructions said to put it........+1 for reading instructions, and +1 for following them.lol
 

Riptide

Will work for Mustang.
Joined
Oct 27, 2009
Posts
5,248
Reaction score
17
Location
Montucky
Don't a lot of tuners use sniffers clipped on the end of the line to tune with?
 

Fullboogie

King of the Ski - OG Jr.
Joined
Oct 27, 2008
Posts
8,667
Reaction score
3,243
Location
Houston
My sensor was welded in before the cat because that was where the install instructions said to put it........+1 for reading instructions, and +1 for following them.lol

My problem was with logistics. At the time I made the post, the exhaust shop had said there was absolutely no room to install the sensor pre-cat. My question was about accuracy of the readings if installed post-cat for those short intervals when I will run the factory H instead of the offroad H. But as mentioned above, we got it installed so all is good.
 

Latest posts

Support us!

Support Us - Become A Supporting Member Today!

Click Here For Details

Back
Top