Re: follow-up: OEM Cat converter for '02 Impreza?
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Re: follow-up: OEM Cat converter for '02 Impreza?
| Carl 1 Lucky Texan | 21 Sep 2008 17:41 |
> Hi all, > [quoted text clipped - 10 lines] > > Thank you, especially Carl, for your help. I'm glad it worked out OK. Put the other $600 dollars aside for the next repair!
lol!
Carl
 Signature to reply, change ( .not) to ( .net)
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| runcyclexcski@gmail.com | 21 Sep 2008 08:41 |
Hi all,
Just a followup on an old story. It was about a Cat converter check engine error and my local subaru dealer trying to make me spend ~ $800 on a new cat converter, despite the fact the emissions checked out normal. I could not get my registration renewed with the check engine light on.
I bought a new front oxygen sensor for $100, paid an honest independent mechanic another $100 to replace ti, and the check engine light went away, never to come back. My car is now registered, and I have saved $600.
Thank you, especially Carl, for your help.
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| runcyclexcski@gmail.com | 26 Aug 2008 00:16 |
On Jul 2, 1:53 am, runcyclexc...@gmail.com wrote:
> My '02 Impreza Outback got 121,000 miles, and my local subaru dealer > has got a Cat converter check engine code reading.t. They quoted me [quoted text clipped - 15 lines] > somehow (heard some urban legends on driving on a highway before the > test). Hi all,
I bugged you guys ~2 months ago about a cat converter error code on a '02 Impreza, and I got some very good suggestions from you.
The problem was an check engine light on (code P0420 - "cat converter below thershold efficiency"), and my dealer was trying to convince me to spend $800 on a new CAT. I can't pass the CA smog test with the test engine light on.
Well, my registration is due in 2 weeks and I just took the car for a smog test (the dealer protested, saying why bother - well, since the retests are free, why not).
It passed the smog test ***easily***. At idle the numbers were: 14.6% CO2, 0.1% O2, 17 ppm HC, 0.03% CO, not anywhere close to the max allowed numbers.
So I runs back to the dealer and ask them just to replace the front O2 sensor. But they *insist* on replacing the cat converter, saying that if the system says it fails, it fails.
So the question is - how can the cat converter be faulty if the emissions are fine? Or do the emission people and the cat converter sensor measure different things?
I can insist on replacing just the O2 sensor ($250 as opposed to $800) though, but at this point I don't know if I can trust them at all - unless I misunderstand something.
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| runcyclexcski@gmail.com | 02 Jul 2008 08:53 |
My '02 Impreza Outback got 121,000 miles, and my local subaru dealer has got a Cat converter check engine code reading.t. They quoted me $850 to replace the Cat ($650 part + $200 labor).
All I need is to pass the California smogs. I am not driving the car much anymore anyway (gas prices), just keep it in the driveway for an occasional camping trip (still cheaper than renting... provided no major repair costs) so giving out $800 just to register the thing just does not sound right.
Goggling produced a $150 (???) "Catco" converter. Does anyone have experience with this beast? Can I bolt it on myself to keep the smoggers happy?
Also, I am not sure if the sensor in the car gives a yes/no kind of answer, or actually produces a real number. Meaning that if I knew that the reading was on the borderline, can I make the car barely pass somehow (heard some urban legends on driving on a highway before the test).
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