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Old 06-16-2009, 05:03 PM   #1
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Cel

Is the MAF the same as oxygen sensor?
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Old 06-16-2009, 05:25 PM   #2
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Maf

Seems to be a different code to mine,
P1123 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 1 (Cylinders 1 - 3) - Lean Threshold



P0101 Mass Air Flow Sensor
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Old 06-17-2009, 08:13 AM   #3
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These are pretty common repairs on Boxsters (and any 9 year old car).

I'm not an expert, but:

The MAF = the "mass air flow" sensor. Its a sensor that sits right behind the air intake behind the driver. You can easily change that yourself it you buy the right type of socket wrench. Hardest part about this job is access to the engine bay -- but the MAF is right on top. You can also clean the MAF, NAPA sells "MAF cleaner". Cleaning has to be done right though.

The "oxygen sensors" are sensors that plug into the exhaust. If you look under the car, they pop into the exhaust system (before and after the catalytic converters) and they have a 6" wire with a plug on the end. Also a do-it-yourself job that is roughly as complex as changing your oil. Hardest part with this is getting under the car and "finding" the sensors. You can change 'em in :30 seconds each.

The MAF tells the engine computer how much fresh air is coming in. The oxygen sensors tell how well the gas and air are being burned in the engine. Together they tell the engine computer how to adjust fuel and air to optimize performance and tune. If the MAF or O2 sensors give bad readings, the car can run rich or lean, resulting in loss of fuel economy, poor idle, loss of power, clogged spark plugs, etc.

I'd suggest running a bottle of TECHRON thru your gas. Read and follow the label directions. After you do that run a full tank of gas (or two) thru. Then change the oil. Techron will clean system out (and dirty your oil). Reset your CEL and see what happens.

If the CEL doesn't go away, you can take the car to someone who can diagnose which bank of O2 sensors (or maybe its just the MAF). Another option is skip all the fretting and diagnostics, change the spark plugs, MAF and O2 sensors and I bet your car will run like a champ for the next 30K miles...

Good luck with it.
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Last edited by fatmike; 06-17-2009 at 08:29 AM.
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Old 06-17-2009, 08:23 AM   #4
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In my wife's BMW, I used to leave the ignition key in the on position to keep the radio for the wife while I was out pumping the gas. The BMW's computer checks for vacuum breaks in the fuel system on a sked of every 5-10 minutes or so. One day after filling up, the CEL popped on as we left the gas station and I'm thinking damm whats's wrong. We found afterward that if the computer checks for vacuum break while the gas cap is off, well thats a major leak that triggers the CEL. So I always take the key out of the ignition when filling up, just to be safe. I have no idea if this applies to Boxsters but its something I always follow in all my cars anyway.
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