Or do you just wait for the light to come on?
I ask because so many of my customers are confused when I recommend new O2 sensors if they have over 90k and never been changed. Its hard for them to understand the scanner when it shows a slow (dying) O2 and explain that's why the mileage has gone down. When the light is on they have failed already. Its like a tire, the tread is past the wear bars you replace it. Not wait for it to blow out because you knowingly drove it one the steel belt for the last month.
Service manuals and manufacturers want them done every 60k but nobody does.
I have had so many people come in that have driven for a year or more with the light on and are amazed when I show them the reason why the car runs like crap is because the cat is melted inside.
I even have a nice chunk I keep on my desk so I can show people easily what happens.
I ask because so many of my customers are confused when I recommend new O2 sensors if they have over 90k and never been changed. Its hard for them to understand the scanner when it shows a slow (dying) O2 and explain that's why the mileage has gone down. When the light is on they have failed already. Its like a tire, the tread is past the wear bars you replace it. Not wait for it to blow out because you knowingly drove it one the steel belt for the last month.
Service manuals and manufacturers want them done every 60k but nobody does.
I have had so many people come in that have driven for a year or more with the light on and are amazed when I show them the reason why the car runs like crap is because the cat is melted inside.
I even have a nice chunk I keep on my desk so I can show people easily what happens.
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