Yet another P0420 code question.
The car is a friend’s 2008 V6 Pontiac G6 GT Convertible. The P0420 is constant but with no driveability issues. A wrinkle is that it’s a 3.9L engine and we literally cannot find a replacement cat. GM has no more stock and there don’t appear to be any aftermarket parts either. This is Pennsylvania, so it’s important to pass the annual inspection. I asked the garage to call PennDOT’s customer help desk, and someone there recommended a part for a different car and a custom welding job, which the mechanic doesn’t do and isn’t confident will fix the code. Also rather expensive.
I have an Innova code reader and am new to catalytic converter issues and oxygen sensors, but think I get the idea. I recorded and stored some real-time data and to my eyes the graphs don’t look that bad. This is the car parked, after idling for 10 minutes. Both banks:
Comments? Yes, I realize the data is meaningless when there’s a code, but if it saves us installing a nonstandard cat, that’s still something. This is the car going from parked to a 20 mpg drive around the block, both banks:
I also noticed an ODB Catalyst Test for each bank:
Is this the actual test that’s causing the P0420 code?? I think I understand oxygen sensor ranges, but the numbers from these tests make no sense. In particular, the bank 2 test (which passes) shows very wide Min and Max ranges…too wide IMHO to diagnose a problem. And why are the Min ranges different? The bank 1 test would still fail if its Min was 0.299815, but it would be a lot closer! Maybe only the GM garage knows?
Another question. Are these “ODB Monitor Tests” run in open loop or closed loop mode? If they’re run shortly after the car is started, I guess that means open loop?
The garage recommended Cataclean, and we used two doses, but with minimal if any effect. After the first dose there may have been 24-36 hours with the cat readyness monitor returned and the CEL off, but it’s also possible one or both of us wasn’t paying attention. In lieu of any better solutions, I started checking things like the air filter and cleaning the MAF sensor. The car was dangerously short of coolant. I’d noticed it was low but didn’t realize how low until my friend mentioned the radiator fan switching on…in Pennsylvania in October. I added at least 10 cups. There’s apparently a leak (he assumed an oil leak) which we’ll be investigating this weekend. On another thread here someone mentioned that a faulty coolant sensor could lead to P0420, and it does seem strange there was no dashboard warning about the low coolant. Thoughts?
Otherwise, can anybody offer other ideas? A faulty computer? Maybe run a smoke test for emissions leaks? Thanks!