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iOnic wrote:Bet it does it more after driving for a while but doesn't when you first drive the car. More heat = more likely to detonate, more load (driving up a hill, accelerating) = more likely to detonate, wrong fuel = more likely to detonate.
Sticker on the inside of the bB's fuel flap mentions high octane, and it runs noticably better on 98 over 95. They're the same CR as a silvertop.
Long time no see Andy
1I1 wrote:Just remember a car has to go through a pre-warrenty inspection. If they pick up on this sensor being faultly then they won't cover it as it's an existing fault
KiwiMR2 wrote:Little bit more to the story now - Toyota plugged it in, history via it2 tester showed a code PO171.
Toyota guy suspected 2 possibilitys, one that the "air fuel sensor" is faulty OR two it has had "poor quality fuel" used.
He said we should run a fuel state
Cleaner through & use decent fuel if possible.
Thinking maybe get the warranty, IF it turns out to be the sensor I think it's like $1500 so the wty will cover it.....
Thoughts now?
Cheers
Andy
matt dunn wrote:
Air Fuel Sensor will be the MAF sensor as said earlier,
and they are about $400 not $1500.
Post the numbers off the top of it and I will confirm a price if you want,
but with that code I would also more suspect an O2 sensor.
iOnic wrote:. Throwing a code doesn't mean it's faulty, more likely doing it's job and telling you when it has sensed a problem ie: too lean.
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