TRQ oxygen sensors are manufactured to precise specifications using premium raw materials to optimize your vehicle’s emission system. Each sensor is isostatically-pressed for improved strength and durability, and plasma-sprayed to improve sensitivity and prolong the service life of the sensors. Oxygen sensors wear out over time and should be replaced every 60,000 miles to prevent poor engine performance. TRQ recommends replacing the oxygen sensors in sets to optimize fuel economy and reduce overall emissions. All products are fit and road-tested in our Massachusetts R&D facility to ensure we deliver on our promise of Trusted Reliable Quality.
Product Features
Application Specific Design: No modifications and pre-calibrated
Isotatic-pressed and plasma-sprayed for extended service life
Double-Layered 310S Stainless Steel: Additional protection from moisture and debris
Restored Engine Performance: Improved fuel economy and lower emissions
What is Upstream vs. Downstream?
Upstream location is between the catalytic converter and the engine
Downstream location is between the catalytic converter and the tailpipe
Install Tip: You may be required to reset the vehicle computer after installation of this part.
Item Condition:New
Attention California Customers:
WARNING: This product can expose you to chemicals including Lead and Lead Compounds, which are known to the State of California to cause cancer, and birth defects or other reproductive harm. For more information, go to www.P65Warnings.ca.gov.
Lifetime Warranty
This item is backed by our limited lifetime warranty. In the event that this item should fail due to manufacturing defects during intended use, we will replace the part free of charge. This warranty covers the cost of the part only.
Returns: Parts with electrical components cannot be returned once installed.
FREE Shipping is standard on Orders shipped to the lower 48 States (Contiguous United States). Standard shipping charges apply to Hawaii, Alaska and US Territories. Shipping is not available to Canada.
Expedited is available on checkout to the United States, excluding Alaska, Hawaii and US Territories as well as P.O. Boxes and APO/FPO/DPO addresses. Final shipping costs are available at checkout.
Is my Car a California or Federal Emissions Vehicle
How to Replace Downstream O2 Oxygen Sensor 2006-07 Ford Explorer V8 4-6L
How to Replace Downstream O2 Sensors 2009-2014 Ford F-150
How To Replace Passenger Side O2 Sensor 1997-2005 Ford F150
How to Replace O2 Oxygen Sensor 1990-2010 Ford F150 Truck
O2 Sensors is it Upstream or Downstream
How to Replace O2 Down Stream Oxygen Sensor 1998-2012 Ford Ranger
Created on:
Tools used
No Tools Needed
1. Determining Your Emissions Specification
Open your hood
Locate your catalyst sticker
If the sticker says "This vehicle conforms to California regulations," you have a California emissions vehicle
If the sticker says "This vehicle conforms to US EPA regulations," you have a federal emissions vehicle
If the sticker lists both EPA and California regulations, you have a California emissions vehicle
Hi, I'm Mike from 1A Auto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years. We're dedicated to delivering quality auto parts, expert customer service, fast and free shipping, all backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee. Visit us at 1AAuto.com, your trusted source for quality auto parts.
Determining whether or not your vehicle is a California emissions or a federal emissions vehicle is pretty straightforward. To do this, you'll want to locate your catalyst sticker under the hood of your vehicle. It'll either be actually on the bottom side of the hood, most GM vehicles have it on the air box, and other vehicles may have it along your radiator support at the front of the engine bay.
All you need to do is see, "This vehicle conforms to California regulations." That means that this vehicle is a California emissions car. Just because you're not in California or are in California doesn't necessarily mean your vehicle will be one way or the other.
Now, our F150 has it down here on the radiator's support, right at the front of the engine bay and you can see here, "This vehicle conforms to US EPA regulations." This means that this vehicle is a federal emissions.
Now, here we have two things that are a little different. Our catalyst is located on the vehicle's air box and this vehicle conforms to US EPA regulations and California regulations. If it conforms to both federal and California emissions, it's considered a California emissions vehicle.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
Tools used
Hammer
Rust Penetrant
Jack Stands
Floor Jack
Wire Cutters
7/8 Inch Wrench
1. Removing the Oxygen Sensor
Raise and support the vehicle
Disconnect the oxygen sensor electrical connector
Cut the oxygen sensor wire with wire cutters
Remove the oxygen sensor with a 7/8" wrench
Strike the wrench with a hammer if necessary
Apply rust penetrant to the sensor if necessary
2. Installing the Oxygen Sensor
Remove the shipping protector from the oxygen sensor
Thread the oxygen sensor into the catalytic converter
Tighten the sensor with a 7/8" wrench
Connect the oxygen sensor electrical connector
Hi, I'm Mike from 1A Auto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years. We're dedicated to delivering quality auto parts, expert customer service, fast and free shipping, all backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee. Visit us at 1AAuto.com, your trusted source for quality auto parts.
In this video, we're going to show you how to replace the downstream oxygen sensor on this 2006 Ford Explorer. It has the 4.6 liter engine. We show you on, I believe the passenger side; driver's side's the same procedure. We hope you like the video. Please click subscribe. Check out 1AAuto.com for all your parts needs for your Explorer or whatever vehicle you might have. Here are the items you'll need for this repair.
Raise and support your vehicle with jack and jack stands. We have ours on a lift. The downstream oxygen sensors are the ones that go right into the catalytic converter. Passenger side is here and driver's side is over here. We're going to show you how to replace the passenger side one.
Follow your oxygen sensor connection up to this blue connector here. There's a tab right here. Press with your thumb and pull to disconnect. To remove your bad O2 sensor, just use a pair of pliers or a pair of wire cutters and cut the wires. That allows you to easily get a 7/8ths wrench right down and on. Many times these are in there kind of tough, so I like to use a hammer just to give it some impact. A few hits will loosen it up. Use some rust penetrant and let it sit. And then I've got it out a little bit and then put rust oil on there, rust penetrant, and now I'm actually going to thread it back in and see if I can work some down in. The old sensor is out.
Here are the old sensor from the vehicle and the new one from 1A Auto. Remove the shipping protector before installation. The connections are exactly the same. The oxygen sensors are exactly the same. The one from 1A Auto is going to be a very good replacement. It's going to fit and function just like your original. New oxygen sensors are available at 1AAuto.com.
Thread in the oxygen sensor. Use a 7/8ths wrench and use the open end to tighten it up. And then just make sure your lead goes up and the tab is down to go into the connector and plug it in and make sure it clicks.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
Tools used
Gloves
O2 Sensor Socket
Jack Stands
Wheel Chocks
22mm Wrench
Anti-Seize Grease
Ratchet
Floor Jack
Safety Glasses
Tools used
22mm Wrench
1. Removing the O2 Sensor
Loosen the bolt on the sensor with a 22mm wrench
Twist out the sensor
Disconnect the wiring harness
Remove the O2 sensor
2. Installing the O2 Sensor
Twist the O2 sensor into place
Tighten the 22mm nut
Connect the wiring harness
Hi, I'm Mike from 1A Auto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years. We're dedicated to delivering quality auto parts, expert customer service, fast and free shipping, all backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee. Visit us at 1AAuto.com, your trusted source for quality auto parts.
Right here on the passenger side of the tuck, on the rear, right behind the catalytic converter, is your rear O2 sensor. It's also known as a downstream O2 sensor, and it's quite easy to take out on this truck. This one actually has a newer exhaust system in it, which is actually making it even easier for us. If yours is old and rusty, it'll take a little bit more force, but it'll still work the same exact way. We're going to start with a 22 millimeter wrench on the O2 sensor itself. We should be able to loosen it up just like that. There is such a thing as an O2 sensor socket, which also makes life a little bit easier. There you go, it's actually out of the pipe that easily.
An O2 sensor socket will make it easier because it fits around the whole socket, or the whole O2 sensor itself, and it allows the wires to go through. So you can use a big breaker bar if you need to instead of a wrench that might slip.
Up at the top of the sensor is a connector, which you need to disconnect to get the sensor out of the truck. Looks like it's going to be a two handed thing. I apologize for kind of blocking the camera there, but you can see this is how the clip works. You push down the tab right here and it releases it from the other connector. Whenever you install an O2 sensor, you never want to plug it in first. You always want to install it first, because when you install it. It's going to spin and if the connector doesn't spin, you're going to bind up all the wires and sometimes it'll actually damage the wire. If you're ever putting an O2 sensor in, make sure you screw it in first. Then once it's all the way screwed in, then you plug it in.
Same 22 millimeter wrench is what we're going to use to tighten it. At that point, you can go up to where you disconnected it. It's the blue connector right on top of the transfer case. Where the transfer case meets the transmission, I should say. At this point, it should snap right into place. Just like that. You'll feel it click.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
Tools used
22mm Wrench
1. Removing the Driver Side O2 Sensor
Locate the O2 sensor on the driver side of the truck behind the catalytic convertors
Loosen the O2 sensor with a 22mm wrench
Disconnect the wiring harness
Remove the O2 sensor
2. Installing the Driver Side O2 Sensor
Tighten the O2 sensor by hand without twisting the wires
Tighten the O2 sensor with a 22mm wrench
Connect the wiring harness
Hi. I'm Mike from 1A Auto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years. We're dedicated to delivering quality auto parts, expert customer service, fast and free shipping all backed by a 100% satisfaction guarantee. So visit us at 1AAuto.com, your trusted source for quality auto parts.
Right here, on the driver's side of the truck right behind the catalytic converters you'll find an O2 sensor. This is the rear O2 sensor, also known as the downstream sensor, and it's pretty easy to disconnect on this truck, especially in this case because this truck actually has a brand-new catalytic converter pipe and it has relatively new O2 sensors. So we're going to show you how to replace them.
We're going to use a 22 millimeter wrench. You can come up from the front and get the wrench on their pretty easily, and then it's just a matter of pushing up to loosen the O2 sensor. Then, if you follow the wire up to the top of the transfer case, you can see it plugs in right here. And if you pull on, if you push the little tab down, right here, and then pull on the connector, it should slide right out. At that point, you can come right back around and spin your O2 sensor right out of the exhaust system, just like that. There we go.
When installing the O2 sensor, you always want to put the O2 sensor in first and tighten it up rather than plugging it in first, and that way it makes it so your wires don't get all bound up. So right now, you can spin it into the hole and make sure that the wires aren't getting all twisted up at the same time. Because if you twist the wires up, sometimes they'll actually get damaged and we don't want to do that. So, we'll use the same 22 millimeter wrench to tighten up the O2 sensor from the front just like when we loosened it.
All right. It's nice and tight now. And at this point we can feed the wire up over the transfer case and we can play it right into the wire harness, just like that.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping and the best customer service in the industry.
Tools used
No Tools Needed
1. Identifying your Oxygen Sensors
Upstream oxygen sensors are located in between the engine and the catalytic converter
Downstream oxygen sensors are located in the catalytic converter or farther away from the engine than the catalytic converter
Locate your vehicle's firing order diagram
The bank that contains cylinder one is bank one
The bank that does not contain cylinder one is bank two, even if it does not contain cylinder two
Hi, I'm Mike from 1A Auto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years. We're dedicated to delivering quality auto parts, expert customer service, fast and free shipping, all backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee. Visit us at 1AAuto.com, your trusted source for quality auto parts.
In this video I have a couple of oxygen sensors with me. While there are some aesthetic differences here, the wire lengths are a little different, the actual body and tip of the sensor are a little different, the threads and gasket are the same, and on the other end the connections are actually the same. I can plug these into either position on our vehicle. But if I had to ask you which one's upstream and which one's downstream, you probably can't tell just from looking at them. That's true of most oxygen sensors. The way you determine whether or not an O2 sensor is upstream or downstream is all done visually.
Your oxygen sensor position can be determined relative to your catalytic convertor. As the name suggests, upstream sensors will be located upstream or ahead of, in front of, above, closer to the engine than your catalytic convertors. This means that they see the exhaust gasses first. They then go through the catalytic convertor and to the downstream oxygen sensor, which will either be located in the catalytic convertor like our vehicle here, or after the catalytic convertor to monitor the gasses coming out of the cat and make sure that it's being efficient relative to the readings of the upstream O2 sensor.
The other determination you need to make is bank one versus bank two. Determining which bank is which can be done by looking at a picture of your vehicle's firing order. Whichever bank contains cylinder one is going to be bank one, and the other one, regardless of whether or not cylinder two is in it, is going to be bank two by default. These banks are true of V engines like V8s, V6s, and flat engines like Porsches and Subarus that have individual banks.
On inline four-cylinder engines, as long as they have one exhaust manifold like a Jeep four-liter or a four-cylinder Honda engine, you'll only have one bank with an upstream and downstream O2 sensor. There will be no bank two on the engine.
On our vehicle here, this is the passenger side, which we've already determined from the firing order is bank one. We have our upstream sensor here closest to the engine ahead of the cat. Then we have our downstream or sensor two here inside of the catalytic convertor. This could also be located somewhere after the cat. Here I have my two sensors for the vehicle. While they are aesthetically different, we can now tell this is my upstream sensor because it looks just like the upstream sensor I have up there. This is my downstream sensor. Now that we know which one's which, we can order the right part, correct the problem, and fix you up right.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
Tools used
22mm Wrench
1. Removing the O2 Sensor
Disconnect the wiring harness
Remove the O2 sensor with a 22mm wrench
2. Installing the O2 Sensor
Install the O2 sensor into place
Connect the wiring harness
Hi, I'm Mike from 1AAuto. We've been selling auto parts for over 30 years! We're dedicated to delivering quality auto parts, expert customer service, and fast and free shipping, all backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee. So visit us at 1AAuto.com, your trusted source for quality auto parts.
In this video, we're going to be working with our 2001 Ford Ranger, 4.0-liter V6. We're going to show you how to remove and replace your rear or downstream O2 sensor.
If you like this video, please click "subscribe." We have a ton more information on this vehicle, as well as many other makes and models. If you ever need parts for your vehicle, you can follow the link down in the description over to 1AAuto.com.
The only items you'll need for this repair are a new O2 sensor and a 22mm wrench
Your O2 sensor is located here, where the exhaust pipe becomes one single piece again right after this double-up cat. The electrical connector is located up here on the side of the transmission. We'll push down on the tab and disconnect that to start. Using a 22-mm open-end wrench, loosen the O2 sensor socket and remove it from the exhaust pipe. Remove the O2 sensor from the exhaust.
Install your new O2 sensor and thread it in as far as you can by hand. Tighten the O2 sensor back in with a 22-mm open-end wrench. Reconnect your electrical connector and you're good to go.
Thanks for watching. Visit us at 1AAuto.com for quality auto parts, fast and free shipping, and the best customer service in the industry.
Recieved this item perfect fit recieved item quickly I have previous items from this company for my 05 navigator and each item perfect fit I will continue to order, from this company
02 sensor
john
August 20, 2018
been in the auto motive field for years and found quality products for my friends and family and great videos as well .prices are really great ... thanks .
MY REVIEW
R
October 1, 2018
Great product and fit perfectly! I couldnt be happier.
Awesome Service
Ernest
June 22, 2019
02 sensor for my 1996 Ford F-150 part fit with no problems. Mechanic installed service light went off. Would recommend product. Part has a warranty with free shipping.
Perfect part, Perfect fit
Martin
July 20, 2019
The part was the perfect fit and resolved my o2 sensor warning. The only thing you should consider is how old and how much mileage you have on the vehicle. My truck is 18 years old and has 150K miles. I needed the o2 open ratchet with a short breaker bar to get mine out. The exhaust support bracked made getting to the sensor a little tricky
C
September 26, 2019
Well worth the money. Fit first time.. check engine light went out. Passed inspection no problem
High Quality O2 Sensor
Mark
October 8, 2019
This O2 sensor worked with no problem. Plug and play and the computer recognized the new part with no issues. I liked the fact that the threads already had the correct anti-seize already applied to the threads.
Oxygen sensor
W
August 13, 2020
The part was the right and identical part for my ranger fit perfect and hooked up just like original only problem took about 8 days to arrive instead of 3 but I believe that was because of the covid 19 I would highly recommend 1aauto auto parts to everyone great parts an great price thanks gw
Easy to follow video tutorial made for easy installation
Mikey
August 27, 2020
The guys at 1A Auto are always thorough with their explanations and make it easy for somebody to follow along with their own DIY repairs.
Fast,cheap, good quality,in a secure package ..
F
January 7, 2021
For people who's thinking in the o2 sensor its just for emission porpuse... !!!NO.. you really notice your auto its running better.. and that better its thanks to 1a Auto
5 STARS
Andrew
August 2, 2021
I love 1aauto. GREAT PRICE AND PERFECT FIT.
Perfect fit! Great product.
David
December 9, 2021
Fit perfectly in my 93 1.9l Ford Escort.
Great part for most part:)
Valerie
January 19, 2023
Easy install and fixed my code and lean issue. But doent have short term fuel trim sensor built in like oem so the cars computer tries to guess injector adjustments and matches the idle weird sometimes
is the down stream sensor also called a return sensor?January 18, 2019
Charlie P
10
Normally they are called just down stream sensors.
January 19, 2019
Corey M
Is this going to fit both the driver and the passenger side?February 13, 2019
Rylan D
10
This part will fit in both the Upstream and Downstream positions depending on the vehicle. We will need more information about your vehicle to confirm the fit.
February 13, 2019
Christa R
Is that part for 2010 escape with v6 ?June 6, 2019
Ala A
10
Yes, according to the information you provided, this part will fit your vehicle.
June 6, 2019
Emma F
on 2010 f150 wich is 02 sensor bank 1 sensor 1 ?February 12, 2021
J S
10
You would have to check with a local mechanic or your dealer. Sensor one is always upstream, but the banks will change from vehicle to vehicle.
February 12, 2021
Adam G
on a 2009 f150 5.4 V8, will this 02 sensor fit both upstream and downstream on both sides?March 16, 2021
Jose B
10
This part will only replace the downstream sensors on your vehicle.
March 16, 2021
Andra M
What does the L4 in "2004 Ford Ranger L4 2.3L Downstream O2 Oxygen Sensor" refer to?June 30, 2021
Juan C
10
That refers to the style of engine, so inline (L) 4 cylinder (4) engine. 2.3L is the displacement in liters, so this is for a 2.3 liter 4 cylinder inline engine.
June 30, 2021
T I
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