04-05-2008, 05:17 PM
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#1
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Huntington, NY
Posts: 409
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Advice for CEL codes P1128 & P1130
I have a code reader and a list of the definitions for these codes from three different sources. Typically I've seen advice that these CEL codes are probably a bad or dirty MAF. But my question is, why does the actual code definition say it involves my O2 sensors? Should I replace all four of my O2 sensors? I hear they are about $130 a piece.
I cleaned my MAF today what are the chances that will take care of my CEL problem?
Engine bay & dirty air filter
The MAF. You need a T-20 Torx Security tip (Tamper proof) to remove the two screws.
Hole where the MAF used to be.
The MAF. This thing cost $250 online $400+ from the dealer! I sprayed electronic parts cleaner on the contact points. The paper clip looking thing.
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2000 Boxster S: 18" Turbo wheels w/color crests, Litronics, Onboard Computer, Traction control, Cruise, Painted rollbar, Leather interior, Aluminum package, headlight washers, Porsche GT3 seats, windstop, Hi Fi six speaker amp package, DSP, CDR 220, Limited Slip, side airbags, BK Rollbar extender.
Last edited by 2000SoCalBoxsterS; 04-06-2008 at 05:18 AM.
Reason: Add pictures
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04-06-2008, 06:08 AM
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#2
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: LA, CA
Posts: 95
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2000SoCalBoxsterS
But my question is, why does the actual code definition say it involves my O2 sensors? Should I replace all four of my O2 sensors? I hear they are about $130 a piece.
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The O2 sensors are just reporting the symptoms of the problem. Since they are the last sensor, there is so much upstream that could result in a O2 code. Cleaning the MAF may work, but if it doesn't, look for vacuum leaks. A vacuum leak could cause a rich condition. In addition to checking the usual tubing around the motor, check the oil cap, oil filler tube and oil dip stick. If that doesn't work, get a new MAF. Keep in mind there are 2 versions. It could be the air/oil separator, too. It's doubtful both O2 sensors went bad at the same time, but stranger things have happened--I recently replaced my O2 sensors and one replacement was bad from day 1 and it took forever to figure that out. Or take it to a shop and have them diagnose. These kinds of problems can take a ton of time to figure out without the proper diagnostic tools.
Last edited by heyjae; 04-06-2008 at 06:12 AM.
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04-06-2008, 11:08 AM
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#3
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Huntington, NY
Posts: 409
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Quote:
Originally Posted by heyjae
The O2 sensors are just reporting the symptoms of the problem. Since they are the last sensor, there is so much upstream that could result in a O2 code. Cleaning the MAF may work, but if it doesn't, look for vacuum leaks. A vacuum leak could cause a rich condition. In addition to checking the usual tubing around the motor, check the oil cap, oil filler tube and oil dip stick. If that doesn't work, get a new MAF. Keep in mind there are 2 versions. It could be the air/oil separator, too. It's doubtful both O2 sensors went bad at the same time, but stranger things have happened--I recently replaced my O2 sensors and one replacement was bad from day 1 and it took forever to figure that out. Or take it to a shop and have them diagnose. These kinds of problems can take a ton of time to figure out without the proper diagnostic tools.
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Thanks Heyjae, all good advice but please don't make me open up that mid-engine compartment again to look for the vacuum leak. I had read somewhere that if one O2 sensor goes bad it's best to change them all at the same time. I think the reasoning was that whatever fouled the first one probably messed up the others too or the new one will be more sensitive than the older ones and this could cause more CEL problems. My car is 8 years old but I only have 39,000 and change miles on it. Do you think some of the rubber could still have deteriorated just from age? I know the answer to that is probably, but I don't want to hear that. Weather sucks here today so I haven't test driven the car yet to see if my cleaned MAF and new air filter worked.
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2000 Boxster S: 18" Turbo wheels w/color crests, Litronics, Onboard Computer, Traction control, Cruise, Painted rollbar, Leather interior, Aluminum package, headlight washers, Porsche GT3 seats, windstop, Hi Fi six speaker amp package, DSP, CDR 220, Limited Slip, side airbags, BK Rollbar extender.
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04-06-2008, 05:26 PM
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#4
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Registered User
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: baton rouge
Posts: 840
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Heyjay:
How about posting a few pictures of the Boxster, in your signature it reads like it must be on mean Box.
Can someone explain exactly what happens with a dirty MAF?
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04-07-2008, 06:42 AM
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#5
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Huntington, NY
Posts: 409
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HeyJae, specifically which of all these rubber tubes are vacuum lines? Which ones should I check?
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2000 Boxster S: 18" Turbo wheels w/color crests, Litronics, Onboard Computer, Traction control, Cruise, Painted rollbar, Leather interior, Aluminum package, headlight washers, Porsche GT3 seats, windstop, Hi Fi six speaker amp package, DSP, CDR 220, Limited Slip, side airbags, BK Rollbar extender.
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05-05-2008, 11:09 AM
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#6
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Registered User
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: calgary
Posts: 6
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I just had the same codes pop up (1128, 1130) as socal2000, and I'm starting with cleaning the MAF thing and looking at the oil cap, other obvious vacuum leaks. @ questions:
1. Is there any real danger in driving my car while I get this thing figured out (note that I generally drive the car as it was intended, but am willing to back off in the short term)?
2. This is probably a stupid question, but after I clean the MAF, should I reset/clear the codes, or will the CEL just go off after a successful fix?
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04-08-2008, 07:12 AM
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#7
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Registered User
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: LA, CA
Posts: 95
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2000SoCalBoxsterS
I had read somewhere that if one O2 sensor goes bad it's best to change them all at the same time. I think the reasoning was that whatever fouled the first one probably messed up the others too or the new one will be more sensitive than the older ones and this could cause more CEL problems. My car is 8 years old but I only have 39,000 and change miles on it. Do you think some of the rubber could still have deteriorated just from age? I know the answer to that is probably, but I don't want to hear that. Weather sucks here today so I haven't test driven the car yet to see if my cleaned MAF and new air filter worked.
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It's unlikely that the O2 sensors are at fault here. I've read conflicting accounts about changing just the bad O2 sensor versus changing all of them. Personally, I changed all of mine, but my car has 80,000 miles and they'd be getting close to being replaced anyway and because I changed all of them with generic O2 sensors and I wanted to keep all of them from the same brand. Of course, one of the 4 I got was bad and I needed to replace it right away and bought a different type. It seems to work pretty well so far.
Looking for a vacuum leak and/or troubleshooting codes is a PITA. After checking the low hanging fruit (cleaning the MAF--maybe replacing it, doing a visual on the vacuum tubes, oil filler tube, checking the oil cap), either take the car to a competent shop or invest in some diagnostic tools and resign yourself to spending hours learning and a lot of trial and error. The basic ones to look at are the 2 small plastic tubes coming out of the rubber coupling between manifold and intake plenum/resonator. There's one on each side. I thing the one on the passenger side is visible from the top and the one on the driver side is visible from the bottom. Then there are the rubber tubes coming from the throttle body. But a vacuum leak can be from the air oil separator (maybe), the secondary air injection system (less likely) or even the brake booster (not likely). Unless you are pretty handy, I'd defer troubleshooting those to a mechanic. There's also using propane to check for leaks. Others seem to do it fine, but I've only tried that once and was not successful with that method.
As far as a visual of the MAF before cleaning, it's probably a thin layer of oil or dirt that's causing the problem and it'd be hard to see. If you have a code reader that shows intake flow, mine is about 4-5 grams/sec. Another thing to check is your short term fuel trims. It should be within +/- 10% normally at idle, although it can be as high as +/- 25%. With the code you are throwing, yours is probably +25%. When my MAF was going bad, at idle the flow would jump around and the STFT would be erratic as well, but that's just one data point.
Last edited by heyjae; 04-08-2008 at 07:30 AM.
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04-08-2008, 07:57 AM
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#8
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Huntington, NY
Posts: 409
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Quote:
Originally Posted by heyjae
It's unlikely that the O2 sensors are at fault here. I've read conflicting accounts about changing just the bad O2 sensor versus changing all of them. Personally, I changed all of mine, but my car has 80,000 miles and they'd be getting close to being replaced anyway and because I changed all of them with generic O2 sensors and I wanted to keep all of them from the same brand. Of course, one of the 4 I got was bad and I needed to replace it right away and bought a different type. It seems to work pretty well so far.
Looking for a vacuum leak and/or troubleshooting codes is a PITA. After checking the low hanging fruit (cleaning the MAF--maybe replacing it, doing a visual on the vacuum tubes, oil filler tube, checking the oil cap), either take the car to a competent shop or invest in some diagnostic tools and resign yourself to spending hours learning and a lot of trial and error. The basic ones to look at are the 2 small plastic tubes coming out of the rubber coupling between manifold and intake plenum/resonator. There's one on each side. I thing the one on the passenger side is visible from the top and the one on the driver side is visible from the bottom. Then there are the rubber tubes coming from the throttle body. But a vacuum leak can be from the air oil separator (maybe), the secondary air injection system (less likely) or even the brake booster (not likely). Unless you are pretty handy, I'd defer troubleshooting those to a mechanic. There's also using propane to check for leaks. Others seem to do it fine, but I've only tried that once and was not successful with that method.
As far as a visual of the MAF before cleaning, it's probably a thin layer of oil or dirt that's causing the problem and it'd be hard to see. If you have a code reader that shows intake flow, mine is about 4-5 grams/sec. Another thing to check is your short term fuel trims. It should be within +/- 10% normally at idle, although it can be as high as +/- 25%. With the code you are throwing, yours is probably +25%. When my MAF was going bad, at idle the flow would jump around and the STFT would be erratic as well, but that's just one data point.
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Hey HeyJae, thank you for taking the trouble to write such an extensive response. But this is a little over my head though in terms or seeing the values for the MAF /Intake.
My code reader is very basic. All it said was P1128 & P1130. This was with the ignition on and the engine not running. There is another function on it where you do a "MIL" reading and it says for that you have the engine running. But even if I then saw these various values I wouldn't know what to do with them.
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2000 Boxster S: 18" Turbo wheels w/color crests, Litronics, Onboard Computer, Traction control, Cruise, Painted rollbar, Leather interior, Aluminum package, headlight washers, Porsche GT3 seats, windstop, Hi Fi six speaker amp package, DSP, CDR 220, Limited Slip, side airbags, BK Rollbar extender.
Last edited by 2000SoCalBoxsterS; 04-09-2008 at 12:10 PM.
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04-08-2008, 09:22 PM
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#9
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Houston
Posts: 49
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I had these same codes about 6 months ago I tried the MAF cleaning first.....to no avail then I tried something really stupid.....atleast I thought......I bought a new oil cap......FIXED!
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04-07-2008, 09:44 AM
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#10
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Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: florida
Posts: 111
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2000SoCalBoxsterS
I have a code reader and a list of the definitions for these codes from three different sources. Typically I've seen advice that these CEL codes are probably a bad or dirty MAF. But my question is, why does the actual code definition say it involves my O2 sensors? Should I replace all four of my O2 sensors? I hear they are about $130 a piece.
I cleaned my MAF today what are the chances that will take care of my CEL problem?
The MAF. This thing cost $250 online $400+ from the dealer! I sprayed electronic parts cleaner on the contact points. The paper clip looking thing.
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The codes 1128 & 1130 are for each individual bank running lean, or that the ECU cannot control the mixture properly, (1128 is for 1-3.., 1130 is for 4-6.. or something like that..).
The fact that the code descriptions say "O2 sensors.." is not representative of the total number of conditions that need to be met to set the codes. The codes are an indicator of the affected system, not for an individual component. It is still up to the technician to properly diagnose the problem, and repair...
I had the same codes poping up on my 2000 boxster for about 8 months.. I used to be a mechanic for Porsche untill 2000 when I got my degree in electrical engineering, so now that I sit on my arse & play with electronics all day, I really didn't want to tinker with the car. So, out of lazy-ness, I tried the first thing that seemed to make sense, clean the MAF & drive it around fer a week or two.. that fixed my problem... its been a year and no CEL...
So, from my expierience, clean the MAF.. & drive...
if the code resets, well then you gotta start testing the system...
Start with the obvious first, vacuum leaks. check the plastic plenum real good, I have seen a few split or crack & cause a temperature sensitive leak..
since both codes set, what ever it is, it is common to both banks.. (on this alone you can rule out the O2 sensors..)
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04-07-2008, 10:03 AM
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#11
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Huntington, NY
Posts: 409
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Thank you Skip, I really appreciate the advice. I did clean the MAF and installed a new air filter. Then the weather turned really crappy and I have not had a chance yet to test drive it. Tomorrow should be my first opportunity.
I'm a little worried that maybe it wasn't the MAF only because the MAF looked clean at least with the naked eye. But I did clean it with the electronic parts cleaner so I hope that does it.
It funny how the PCA.org site can be inconsistent with their Tech advice. I saw one Q&A answer dated 2004 where the Tech said never clean a MAF that will not fix a dirty MAF. Then in 2006 the same Tech answered the could my MAF be bad question with "try to clean it first with electronic parts cleaner, that that often fixes the problem."
They also told me No 19" wheels they will rub your wheel well liners through. And again, the folks here with 19" wheels and the same year Box as mine disproved that advice.
I'm gald I have you all as a check & balance. Thanks!
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2000 Boxster S: 18" Turbo wheels w/color crests, Litronics, Onboard Computer, Traction control, Cruise, Painted rollbar, Leather interior, Aluminum package, headlight washers, Porsche GT3 seats, windstop, Hi Fi six speaker amp package, DSP, CDR 220, Limited Slip, side airbags, BK Rollbar extender.
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04-07-2008, 10:33 AM
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#12
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Chicago
Posts: 1,518
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For what it's worth, here's my experience with cleaning the MAF after I got codes P1123 & P1125 last year :
http://986forum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=11810
P1123 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 1 (Cylinders 1 - 3) - Lean Threshold
P1125 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 1 (Cylinders 4 - 6) - Lean Threshold
P1128 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 2 (Cylinders 1 - 3) - Rich Threshold
P1130 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 2 (Cylinders 4 - 6) - Rich Threshold
Nick
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04-07-2008, 12:45 PM
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#13
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Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Huntington, NY
Posts: 409
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Quote:
Originally Posted by NickCats
For what it's worth, here's my experience with cleaning the MAF after I got codes P1123 & P1125 last year :
http://986forum.com/forums/showthread.php?t=11810
P1123 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 1 (Cylinders 1 - 3) - Lean Threshold
P1125 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 1 (Cylinders 4 - 6) - Lean Threshold
P1128 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 2 (Cylinders 1 - 3) - Rich Threshold
P1130 Oxygen Sensing Adaptation Area 2 (Cylinders 4 - 6) - Rich Threshold
Nick
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And what was the end result? Did cleaning the MAF in your case fix the problem?
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2000 Boxster S: 18" Turbo wheels w/color crests, Litronics, Onboard Computer, Traction control, Cruise, Painted rollbar, Leather interior, Aluminum package, headlight washers, Porsche GT3 seats, windstop, Hi Fi six speaker amp package, DSP, CDR 220, Limited Slip, side airbags, BK Rollbar extender.
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04-07-2008, 12:49 PM
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#14
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Registered User
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Chicago
Posts: 1,518
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So far, so good ( now watch, I'll bet the CEL lights up on the way home  )
Nick
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