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I was going to get one out and then pick up some stainless bolts and washers before doing the real job. I guess the oxygen sensors are in there, too, so I might replace them as long as I am in there.If minimal rust, then it’s easy. If rusted all to hell, then it won’t be fun. Soak all the bolts and nuts in PB blaster for a while, or just cut the bolt heads/nuts with a cutoff wheel and angle grinder. Whatever you do, buy new OEM bolts, nuts, and gaskets.
I had this in the shop for something else and asked them to check the check engine light. The shop said the cats were bad and needed replacement.Curious why you're replacing (other than if yours got stolen). Really rare for cats to go bad, unless you ignored an o2 sensor forever and fouled the material.
If you or your mechanic has access to Techstream, there's a really neat test sequence in the software that shows you the O2 sensor response with purposefully enriched mixtures. It helps you verify if a sensor is weird or if the cat is truly damaged. Pretty surefire way to diagnose it without playing the parts swap game.I had this in the shop for something else and asked them to check the check engine light. The shop said the cats were bad and needed replacement.
I tried some cat cleaner and got no results. I am going to get a second opinion before going further. I can disconnect the battery and clear the CEL but as soon as the truck warms up it comes back.
I am also looking into removing them and cleaning them, which I am told can be done. But as long as I have them out I might as well replace them.
And speaking of rarely going out, my other LX has 335,000 on it and still runs like new. And there is no problem with the cats.
Honestly...you can buy get a scanner for cheap and look up your own codes. I wouldn't leave that solely to a mechanic to determine. I'm pretty much a 1-I had this in the shop for something else and asked them to check the check engine light.
I just picked up a fancy sort of scanner at Wally World that plugs into the scanner port and stays there. Then you download an app on you phone and through the wonders of bluetooth scan your codes.Honestly...you can buy get a scanner for cheap and look up your own codes. I wouldn't leave that solely to a mechanic to determine. I'm pretty much a 1-guy myself and even I do that. Haven't had to ferret one out on the LX, but I have ferreted out and replaced several O2 sensors on my 2UZ 4Runners.