TIAGO TIGOR BSVI - SERVICE MANUAL - DTC 24-12-2021
TATA BSVI Gasoline Program – EMS ECU Bosch DTC Troubleshooting Service Manual Version: 1.2 Date: 18-12-2019 Prepared By: Sunita Mandlik Checked By: Yeshwant Jadhav Approved By: Satish Kumar Document Part No: 2921 02 xxx xxxx Page: 227 of 1498 Copyright © TATA MOTORS Ltd. This document must not be used in any way, such as copying and redistributing to third parties, without the consent of author. P0131-11: O2 Sensor Circuit Low Voltage(Bank 1 Sensor1) Voltage – Circuit Short to Ground Overview: ISO Code P0131-11 Customer Symptom 1. No effect on engine starting. 2. Drivability may be effected. Fault Effects (On Vehicle) LAMBDA Control will be deactivated, vehicle running in Open loop initially for longer time. Lamp Status (If Any) MIL ON after 3 Drive cycles Fault Detection Condition This fault gets logged if EMS ECU finds the upstream oxygen Sensor Signal pin is short Circuited to ground. Normal Operating Condition Upstream Oxygen Sensor provides plausible signal to EMS ECU. Probable Trouble Area Wiring Harness connections, Sensor Healing Condition Engine State Running and 3 drive cycles Fault Present deletion 1. Clear DTC Command form Scan tool 2. Stack Over Flow. 3. 40 warm up cycles. 4. ECU Flashing. 5. ECU Power-Fail Component Details: The oxygen Sensor operates on the principle of galvanic oxygen concentration cell (Nernst cell) with solid electrolyte (Nernst's principle). The ceramic sensing element is a conductor of oxygen ions from a temperature of 350 C. A heater is integrated on the sensing element. It is placed into the exhaust manifold. The sensing element compares the residual oxygen content in the exhaust gas with the oxygen content in the reference atmosphere (air surrounding the sensing element). This gives an output voltage between 100mV (lean exhaust gas) to 800mV (rich exhaust gas), depending on whether the exhaust gas is lean or rich. Preliminary Checks: 1) Loose/ Damaged Connections between Sensor and EMS ECU. 2) Check for back out of pins at both Sensor connector and ECU connector. 3) Check for damage of pins at both Sensor connector and ECU connector. 4) Check the continuity from Sensor connector pins to the ECU pins. 5) Check for Sensor poisoning / contamination. 6) Check for leakage in Exhaust system.
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