turbo_bu
October 9th, 2015, 04:01 AM
I wanted to see if anyone has played with the different types of heated O2 sensors (e.g. - grounded vs. isolated). I have been researching doing a swap with either a 512 kB (blue/red) or a 1 MB (blue/green) LS1B PCM, and noticed that there could have been several different HO2S configurations. Specifically, this will be a non-emissions swap, so I don't need the secondary O2's, just the primary. From looking at the 512 Kb wiring diagrams, it shows that there were several different ways GM hooked up the O2's. The 1 MB PCM's appear to have carried over the isolated grounded O2's.
Some very good back ground information on this topic is found on the lt1swap.com website (www.lt1swap.com\vortec_o2_sensors.htm). But one thing it doesn't talk about is if it really matters or not. Specifically, the thing I noticed was that the 2002 Camaro (F-body) O2 sensor uses +12 V and chassis ground to power the heater. The other iterations of O2 heater circuits use either +12V and PCM ground to control the heater circuit .... or power and ground both hooked up to the PCM.
Since this is a swap, and I am making my own wiring harness, couldn't I just use +12V and chassis ground to hook the heater portion of the O2's? Or do I have to use the PCM to help control the heater circuit? For the Camaro O2's, (I believe those are the grounded type) you can do this since that's what the factory did.
But if you happen to have the isolated grounded O2's, then do you have to use the PCM to help control the heater portion? Does the PCM really care? Doesn't it just want to see the signal swinging back and forth above / below 0.450 volts?
Can you hook up an isolated grounded O2 to just +12V and chassis ground and get it to work?
Or maybe you can hook up a case grounded O2 to a 1 MB PCM (those appear to be all isolated grounded) using just =12v and chassis ground. Again, as long as the actual O2 signal wires are still connected to the PCM, would it still work?
Going forward, I was hoping that I could just standardized on a type of O2, to make that part of the wiring easier. That way instead of having to worry about which kind of O2 it was, and / or what the OS I was using was setup for, I could just hook them all up the same. If you have played with this and can provide any insight, I would be very grateful.
Thanks,
Some very good back ground information on this topic is found on the lt1swap.com website (www.lt1swap.com\vortec_o2_sensors.htm). But one thing it doesn't talk about is if it really matters or not. Specifically, the thing I noticed was that the 2002 Camaro (F-body) O2 sensor uses +12 V and chassis ground to power the heater. The other iterations of O2 heater circuits use either +12V and PCM ground to control the heater circuit .... or power and ground both hooked up to the PCM.
Since this is a swap, and I am making my own wiring harness, couldn't I just use +12V and chassis ground to hook the heater portion of the O2's? Or do I have to use the PCM to help control the heater circuit? For the Camaro O2's, (I believe those are the grounded type) you can do this since that's what the factory did.
But if you happen to have the isolated grounded O2's, then do you have to use the PCM to help control the heater portion? Does the PCM really care? Doesn't it just want to see the signal swinging back and forth above / below 0.450 volts?
Can you hook up an isolated grounded O2 to just +12V and chassis ground and get it to work?
Or maybe you can hook up a case grounded O2 to a 1 MB PCM (those appear to be all isolated grounded) using just =12v and chassis ground. Again, as long as the actual O2 signal wires are still connected to the PCM, would it still work?
Going forward, I was hoping that I could just standardized on a type of O2, to make that part of the wiring easier. That way instead of having to worry about which kind of O2 it was, and / or what the OS I was using was setup for, I could just hook them all up the same. If you have played with this and can provide any insight, I would be very grateful.
Thanks,