High Fuel Consumption since I fixed the heat sensor

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Jason, Nov 30, 2004.

  1. Jason

    Jason Guest

    Hi!

    Would like to have some feedback of people who had the heat sensor on their
    civic's changed (have a 98 civic hatch)... Ever since, I've noticed that my
    car guzzles up the gaz!!I'm getting around 11 liters/100km. It's nuts! Any
    help or advice would be appreciated.

    p.s.: even though I've replaced the heat sensor no.1, sometimes I still
    smell the 'rotten eggs'. Not sure if the sensor is working properly. I don't
    get the 'check engine' light...

    Thanks!!

    Jason
     
    Jason, Nov 30, 2004
    #1
  2. Jason

    Randolph Guest

    Pardon my ignorance, but what is a "heat sensor"?
     
    Randolph, Nov 30, 2004
    #2
  3. Jason

    Randolph Guest

    Pardon my ignorance, but what is a "heat sensor"?
     
    Randolph, Nov 30, 2004
    #3
  4. Jason

    Pars Guest

    My 98 Civic Hatch gives poor mileage until the engine warms up. If your
    Thermostat is broken and does not allow the engine to work at an optimum
    temperature, the engine will return poor mileage. Also, exhaust emission
    will be poor until the engine decides that the car is warm enough to go
    into a more efficient burn (proper air/fuel mixture). Since there's more
    pollutant
    coming out of the engine (because it's running too cold), it's going to put
    more
    of strain on the catalytic converter which has to process all the extra
    pollutant.
    Catalytic converter replacement can be expensive.

    Pars
     
    Pars, Nov 30, 2004
    #4
  5. Jason

    Pars Guest

    My 98 Civic Hatch gives poor mileage until the engine warms up. If your
    Thermostat is broken and does not allow the engine to work at an optimum
    temperature, the engine will return poor mileage. Also, exhaust emission
    will be poor until the engine decides that the car is warm enough to go
    into a more efficient burn (proper air/fuel mixture). Since there's more
    pollutant
    coming out of the engine (because it's running too cold), it's going to put
    more
    of strain on the catalytic converter which has to process all the extra
    pollutant.
    Catalytic converter replacement can be expensive.

    Pars
     
    Pars, Nov 30, 2004
    #5
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