SHOTHANG,
You really have asked the $64,000 question. ("The $64,000 Question" was an early TV game show somewhat like "Who Wants To Be a Millionaire")
The computer is programmed to expect an electrical signal, generally in terms of volts or ohms resistance, from the sensors. Say for example a coolant temperature sensor gives the computer a reading in ohms.
As the temperature changes so does the ohms measurement. If the amount of resistance (ohms) is not what the computer expects, then the computer sets a "code". That code number will tell you that the amount of resistance is to high, to low, or no signal is being received at all.
This will tell you that the sensor is bad, or that the connection is bad or poor, or that the wire (or wires) between the sensor and the computer is shorted, broken, or corroded.
Then there is also the posibility that the ground for the circuit that the sensor is in is not good.
The best answer I can give you, as to how to interpret the codes, is that the codes give you a place to start your diagnostics. Just because you get an O2 sensor code, does not mean you have a bad O2 sensor. It means that the computer is not getting a signal within the expected or programmed peramiters.
The problem for you to solve is WHY isn't the computer getting the volts or ohms reading that it expects from a given sensor.
Check your local library for a book titled "Tuning Up Autos and Trucks, A Guidebook of Solutions for Testing, Evaluating, and Analyzing Computer Controlled Vehicles", by Milton Webb.
Try
[email protected] for information regarding the book. The book is $49.95 if you want your own copy. It is worth it if you plan to work on cars made after 1975 (approximately), and especially those made after 1995 with OBDII systems.
I am glad you brought this topic up because it opens the door for our forum members to discuss their experiences doing the diagnostics on the various sensors, and how they determined whether the sensor was bad, had a bad connection, a shorted wire, a broken wire, etc.
Ladies and gentlemen, DK has thrown down the gauntlet. I join him.
We can read the expression hundreds, if not thousands, of times "check the codes". OK, then what? Any monkey can change parts (go to any dealership), the real "mechanic's" art is in the diagnostics.
How about some of that super technical information on the computer, the sensors, the codes, the symptoms, and the diagnostics?
Pick a sensor and give the forum a disertation based upon your experiences, PLEASE. rangerj