Today, I had the luxury of replacing the what looked like a 17-year-old oxygen sensor which seemed to be rust welded to the bung - uhhhhhh.
Well, after hitting it with some penetrating juice (all I had was WD-40 in my personal garage), I let it sit for five minutes, and then I wiped the residual off with a shop towel. Of course, the thing didn't budge upon initial attempt to remove it. Before I became fully frustrated ending up with rounded edges on the old sensor, I decided to think like an engineer.
The problem, I didn't want any rounded off edges on the O2.
My solution, I took a 0.5" x 3.0" piece of 80 grit sand paper, wrapped the coarse portion around the hex nut portion of the O2 sensor, and then put a 7/8 wrench over the sand paper. 15 seconds later, after some applied muscle to the wrench, .
I know. I know. Yes, they make O2 sensor tools, but this worked and was a lot cheaper.
Peace.
Well, after hitting it with some penetrating juice (all I had was WD-40 in my personal garage), I let it sit for five minutes, and then I wiped the residual off with a shop towel. Of course, the thing didn't budge upon initial attempt to remove it. Before I became fully frustrated ending up with rounded edges on the old sensor, I decided to think like an engineer.
The problem, I didn't want any rounded off edges on the O2.
My solution, I took a 0.5" x 3.0" piece of 80 grit sand paper, wrapped the coarse portion around the hex nut portion of the O2 sensor, and then put a 7/8 wrench over the sand paper. 15 seconds later, after some applied muscle to the wrench, .
I know. I know. Yes, they make O2 sensor tools, but this worked and was a lot cheaper.
Peace.
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