Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.
I would imagine that if you remove the main cats then it will throw a rear O2 sensor code (or you have them turned off). If you're in an area where they check for that then my guess is you would fail. If you're in an area where they only do a visual inspection, chances are you could take it someplace and pass.I live in texas. I also know that they can tell if they o2 sensors are turned off and thats what they do for the tunes for catless down pipes right?
You could always get non catted and if they fail, install the stock DP for inspection.Man, I'm on the fence myself. With inspections being pretty lax around these parts, I'm leaning towards non-catted, though. I don't know if there's much power difference between the two...
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk
Mine is still stock and likely will remain stock because I'm not looking to do many mods on this car. That said, I've had many vehicles with no cats in the past and have a different car without cats. Personally, I wouldn't call it a gas smell as it doesn't smell like gas to me. But there definitely is a unique odor that I wouldn't want to be stuck smelling in a traffic jam. But driving through town with the occasional red light, I don't have any issues with the smell.What do you have on yours? Is there any merit to what some say about smelling gas fumes on non-catted?
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G930A using Tapatalk
I appreciate the response. That's exactly what I needed to know. This is my family car, and my wife drives it more than I do. I want to make sure it stays as comfortable as possible. Catted it isMine is still stock and likely will remain stock because I'm not looking to do many mods on this car. That said, I've had many vehicles with no cats in the past and have a different car without cats. Personally, I wouldn't call it a gas smell as it doesn't smell like gas to me. But there definitely is a unique odor that I wouldn't want to be stuck smelling in a traffic jam. But driving through town with the occasional red light, I don't have any issues with the smell.
If I was going to get DPs for the SHO I would go catted because it would fit the car type better. I want my SHO to be a bit more refined and not raw.
I know exactly what you're referencing on the Mustang as I used to have those on mine. They are called MIL eliminators and it's a capacitor and resistor wired into the O2 wiring. This created a fake good signal so it passed. My brother-in-law had no cats on his Civic and used some spacer to pull the O2 sensor out of the airflow and that caused his to read good. If the signal the SHO expects is the same as the signal from the Mustang than MIL eliminators might work.Slightly off subject, but don't they make cheater post Cat O2 sensors? I'm fairly sure the kid next door put them on his Mustang several years ago, he installed a catless X pipe system and I pulled a circuit diagram that he needed to wire it. From what I recall he cut the factory post cat O2 sensor wires (for the connector) and wired in the fake sensor that gives the pcm a flat signal to indicate the cats were present and working properly. In my area, for emissions inspections they just scan the PCM to verify the monitors have all ran and passed. If that's consistent with other parts of the country, all you'd need to do is have a nut to accept the sensor welded to the down pipe and install the cheat sensor. Without it, doesn't it trigger the mil so you run around looking at the check engine light all day?
There are front and rear O2's on this and nearly every other modern vehicle. While I don't know specifically for this car, on every other car I know about the rear O2 sensors are simply in place to determine if the cats are good or bad. All the wideband and engine management decisions are determined from the front O2 sensors before the cats. If you think about it for a second it makes sense the rear O2 sensors aren't used for engine management. If they did that then they would be attempting to determine air:fuel ratio based on a measurement that could be off depending on how the cats are performing.Aren't the 02's in the sho wideband sensors? I think to have the engine run properly you need to have them functioning. Maybe install the dummy ones just for inspection
Sent from my iPhone