Simon Crook wrote:
the little research I have find is it needs a 'narrow-band 02 sensor' (if this is correct!)
That's a surprise - I'd have expected it'd want a wideband.
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1, What do I need to make it work
At a guess... Earth (black?), live (red?) and lambda (blue?) signal.
If you put +12v across black and red, it might fire into life, but won't give you a sensible reading without the lambda signal being present.
There's two basic lambda technologies - Zirconia (common), which ranges from 0.1 to 0.9v, and Titanium (rare), which ranges from 0 to 5.0v. Feed a low voltage (near-flat AA battery?) into the blue wire and earth, and see what happens.
Lambda sensors come in a variety of wiring, too - 1, 2, 3 or 4 wire.
1-wire has a signal wire and earths through the exhaust.
2-wire has an earth wire
3-wire adds a live for the heater (they don't work properly until they're hot)
4-wire adds a separate earth for the heater.
http://www.lambdasensor.com/main/mcolours1.htmQuote:
2, Where does the sensor go
In the exhaust, as close to the head as possible. Ideally, on a 2cv, you'd want a pair of AFR meters, one for each side.
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3, And really what does it really do
It tells you whether your engine is running rich or lean, and how much.
This is why a narrowband sensor surprises me - a narrowband sensor only works around a fairly small distance from stochiometry - 14.7:1 air:fuel. That's where you want the mixture to be for a cat to work effectively, but not for either maximum power or maximum economy. A wideband sensor will give a sensible reading over a much wider range of air:fuel.
Why do you want it? To help you get the fuelling right. Typically, you'd add one if you were putting on injection - Megasquirt or similar - and trying to set the fuelling map up. With carb, it'll help you get the jetting right.