Denso 234-4162 Oxygen Sensor

Denso 234-4162 Oxygen Sensor

Denso 234-4162 Oxygen Sensor

  • Designed to detect the amount of oxygen in the exhaust system
  • Constructed from high quality material
  • Features double protection layer, aluminum oxide trap layer, PTFE filter and stainless steel housing
  • Manufactured with precision to meet OE standards
  • Easy installation

Denso Oxygen Sensor is designed to detect the amount of oxygen in the exhaust stream. It is constructed from high quality stainless steel, porous polytetrafluoroethylene, fluorine rubber, aluminum oxide, high-grade platinum and ceramics. This Sensor features double protection layer, aluminum oxide trap layer, porous PTFE filter and stainless steel housing. It is manufactured with precision to meet OE standards. This oxygen sensor can be installed easily and ensures longevity.

List Price: $ 104.09

Price: [wpramaprice asin=”B000C5UFK8″]

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Comments

  1. 6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    OXYGEN SENSOR FOR 1998 TOYOTA TACOMA, October 19, 2012
    By 

    Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Denso 234-4162 Oxygen Sensor (Automotive)
    Received the item via regular shipping in 3 business days and in excellent conditon. My Tacoma has 4wd and standard 5 speed transmission. The Denso oxgen sensor was a perfect fit. My pocket scanner had been showing an engine malfunction code of P0125. Initially, for several months, the engine malfuction light would come on, my scanner would show this code, and I would erase the code with the scanner which caused the light to go out. The engine light would not come on again until 50-100 miles later. Recently, the light started coming on after the engine temperature gauge warmed up to normal operating temp. I think the sensor was telling me that it was completely shot. Some website posts were suggesting a bad thermostat for causing the problem. But, the new 234-4162 Denso oxygen sensor immediately fixed the malfunction. My truck, as do
    most, has two oxygen sensors (one in front of catalytic converter and the other behind it). I replaced the front (upstream) sensor which is closest to the engine and the one most likely to go bad. The sensor comes with a top quality gasket but no nuts. I purchased two stainless steel nuts to replace the two that were rusted. The total cost for the sensor was $74.21 which includes taxes and shipping. Autozone was asking $105 plus tax.

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  2. 5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    1995 Toyota Tacoma Ext. Cab 4WD Auto Trans, May 9, 2012
    By 

    Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
    This review is from: Denso 234-4162 Oxygen Sensor (Automotive)
    Had a P0133 code, replaced the upstream oxygen sensor and problem has been gone now for 2 weeks. Price on Amazon for the part was less than half of what it was at my local auto parts stores. Also, surprisingly, this 1995 vehicle has an OBD2 connector that makes it easy to get the code read at any Advance Auto or Auto Zone free of charge if you don’t have a reader of your own.

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