plastrd
Member
- Thread starter
- #1
Got a couple instances of code P1128 this winter when it was really cold and the one thread in this part of the forum about it had some mixed luck replacing the upstream O2 sensor (Mopar 68217019AA). For reference I have a 2021 with 72k miles.
Received the replacement sensor and an O2 sensor socket set that was also recommended and planning to tackle it tomorrow morning. There's a distinct lack of repair guides on the 2.0 so I wanted to make sure this is as easy as it looks before I break something before our road trip Sunday.
So as far as I can see the sensor (circled in red) is screwed into the exhaust just after the turbo. It's surrounded by a heat shield with at least two screws circled in blue. Will the heat shield need to be removed to get the socket on the sensor and remove/replace it? If so, anything else that needs to come out to get access to any more screws?
Is this going to be easier to remove with a cold exhaust or hot and what level of pucker factor am I looking at with regard to risk of snapping the sensor off? I know typical exhaust manifold studs are good for that due to the heat exposure so want to make this as painless as possible.
If I make it this far, any particular torque spec for the new one or just make it guten tight?
Received the replacement sensor and an O2 sensor socket set that was also recommended and planning to tackle it tomorrow morning. There's a distinct lack of repair guides on the 2.0 so I wanted to make sure this is as easy as it looks before I break something before our road trip Sunday.
So as far as I can see the sensor (circled in red) is screwed into the exhaust just after the turbo. It's surrounded by a heat shield with at least two screws circled in blue. Will the heat shield need to be removed to get the socket on the sensor and remove/replace it? If so, anything else that needs to come out to get access to any more screws?
Is this going to be easier to remove with a cold exhaust or hot and what level of pucker factor am I looking at with regard to risk of snapping the sensor off? I know typical exhaust manifold studs are good for that due to the heat exposure so want to make this as painless as possible.
If I make it this far, any particular torque spec for the new one or just make it guten tight?
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