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Knock sensor wire fried on header P0332 code

6K views 16 replies 5 participants last post by  SCyjGTO  
#1 ·
Hi all,

I had my car throw the first ever CEL the other day and it was the P0332. Makes sense since I just had some tranny work done and they were right in that area. So I searched here and sure enough I had the wire and sensor sitting on my slp header and there is a slight black mark from where it fried part of the wire harness above the sensor. I tried to zip tie the wire and sensor above the header and cleared the code and it came back so now I am trying to figure out what to do. The sensor itself is only like $12 but that doesn't include the wire harness. Since it was the wire that got fried, I'm thinking I need to replace that too? I can't seem to find the part and neither can O'reilly. Take it to a dealership?

Another thing: this happened right after I got some BP 93 (from the same place I always go) and the car has been surging and stalling (like right when you first put it in drive) until it's warmed up. Could this code throw the car into limp mode/onto another map? I have extensive mods and tune work done to the car and it runs pretty much flawlessly so I'm hoping that since these two things came into being at the same time, they are related. Either the code is throwing the car into a backup map, or it's bad gas and a bad sensor.

TL;DR Should I replace the whole wire above the sensor and where do I get that shit? Could the code send my car into "limp mode" and moreover if it was in a backup map, will it come right back to the primary map once the problem is resolved?

Thanks in advance.
 
#2 ·
If I had to guess, I'd say that code is throwing you into "Open Loop", not limp mode. You can barely drive the car in limp mode.

Can't answer the other part, but if it was me, I'd fix the wire, and borrow someone's HP Tuners or a scanner from O'Reilly's to clear the code...then replace the wire if it doesn't help.

You also should check for blown fuses. Would have to break out the manuals, but I think that is protected by the same fuse the powers the O2 sensors.
 
#3 ·
Maybe I should actually read your entire post before responding. :D
 
#5 ·
this is really better than replacing the wire with origional?

and if it's in open loop, and the problem is resolved, then it will automatically go back into normal ops/closed loop/whatever, right?
 
#7 ·
Are there any systems in modern cars that cannot tolerate a broken wire? Common sense says that a wire is a wire, and a good repair will be just as good as new, but back when I worked on aircraft, I know there were some systems that were so sensitive to resistance changes that you were not allowed to replace the wire.

OP, some codes will clear on their own, and some won't.
 
#8 ·
Gerry, the only systems in a car that are so sensitive that a quality splice could be a problem are the CAN wires and Airbags. Airbags are the only circuits in a car that are actually monitored for resistance.

Ive repaired CAN several times with great success. Airbags I wont fuck with.
 
#9 ·
Gerry, the only systems in a car that are so sensitive that a quality splice could be a problem are the CAN wires and Airbags. Airbags are the only circuits in a car that are actually monitored for resistance.

Ive repaired CAN several times with great success. Airbags I wont smurf with.
lol

Don't blame you.
 
#10 ·
Check Fuse and repair wire, then sensor, its possible the sensor is still good. With the ECU seeing a bad knock sensor it could've put u into the low octane table, don't know why this would cause surging unless that table was altered.
 
#11 ·
When you get kicked into Open Loop, I'm pretty sure that the ECM defaults back to the VE table just like if you had a MAF failure...and I think most tuners give it little attention unless it is a strictly speed density tuned.
 
#12 ·
All great info, thanks. But just to verify, if the ecu kicked out of normal parameters (eg. Into a low octane table, open loop, etc...), it would return to normal ops on its own once the problem is solved, correct. I mean is there any chance it could get stuck in some lower performance mode even if everything else is green?
 
#13 ·
If I could answer that question, I would. I do know that some codes will clear themselves (stored in history), but I just don't know if that one will or not.

If you haven't checked for blown fuses, stop and do that now...in both fuse blocks. Look for something called Engine Sensors.
 
#14 ·
Knock sensor doesnt get Vref. it generates its own voltage via piezo.

All codes in an ECM will self-clear in 80 drive cycles (not key cycles) or less if the problem is not seen again. Knock sensor is a second trip monitor, so the engine will resume normal function as soon as the issue is corrected.
 
#16 ·
As Konnie said, just cut out the bad wire and solder in new wire. It won't hurt anything.
 
#17 ·
Let us know if the surging stops,