Oxygen Sensor Replacement in Artarmon — Fix the Fuel Mix

Oxygen sensors (also called O2 sensors or lambda sensors) measure the amount of oxygen in your exhaust gases, allowing the engine management system to fine-tune the fuel-to-air mixture for optimal combustion. A failing oxygen sensor causes a rich or lean fuel mixture, resulting in poor fuel economy, increased emissions, rough running and a check engine light. At Brumby Motors in Artarmon, we diagnose and replace faulty oxygen sensors on all makes and models.

Symptoms of a Failing Oxygen Sensor

  • Check engine light — one of the most common triggers
  • Noticeably increased fuel consumption
  • Rough idle or hesitation under acceleration
  • Failed emissions test
  • Black smoke from the exhaust — sign of running rich
  • Catalytic converter damage — a faulty upstream O2 sensor can destroy a converter

Our Oxygen Sensor Service

  • Diagnostic scan to confirm O2 sensor fault code and identify which sensor
  • Live data monitoring — confirm the sensor is not responding correctly
  • Oxygen sensor replacement with correct OEM-spec unit for your vehicle
  • Fault code clear and road test to confirm correct operation

Upstream vs Downstream Sensors — What’s the Difference?

Most vehicles have at least two oxygen sensors per exhaust bank. The upstream sensor (before the catalytic converter) controls the air-fuel mixture. The downstream sensor (after the converter) monitors catalytic converter efficiency. Fault codes will specify which sensor is faulty — we replace only the faulty unit, not both by default, unless there is a clear reason to do so.

Frequently Asked Questions — Oxygen Sensor Artarmon

Q: Can I drive with a faulty oxygen sensor?

A: Yes for a short time — but not recommended. A faulty O2 sensor causes the engine to run on a default fuel map, which uses more fuel and produces more emissions. Over time, a bad upstream sensor can also destroy your catalytic converter — a far more expensive replacement. Address it promptly.

Q: How long do oxygen sensors last?

A: Typically 100,000–160,000 km on modern wideband sensors. Sensors can fail earlier due to coolant or oil contamination, physical damage or silicon poisoning from incorrect sealants.

Q: Do I need to replace all oxygen sensors at once?

A: No. We replace only the sensor identified as faulty by the diagnostic scan. Replacing all sensors ‘just in case’ is unnecessary unless the vehicle is high-mileage and they are all approaching end of life — in which case we’ll discuss that with you.

📞 Call Us: (02) 9906 4444
📍 29 Dickson Avenue, Artarmon NSW 2064
⏰ Monday–Friday: 8am–5pm
info@brumbymotors.com.au