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DeLorean Oxygen Sensor

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Oxygen Sensor - Bosch 11027Oxygen Sensor - Bosch 11027
BoschPart # 11027
Oxygen Sensor - Bosch 11027
4.65 Reviews
$36.99
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3-year warranty
90 days free return
Fits 1995-1996 AM General Hummer, 1986-1990 Acura Legend, 1986-1991 Acura Integra, 1981-1982 Alfa Romeo GTV-6, 1982-1985 Alfa Romeo Spider, 1988-1988 American Motors Eagle, 1978-1978 Audi 5000, 1979-1979 Audi Fox, 1979-1985 Audi 5000, 1980-1981 Audi 4000, 1981-1986 Audi Coupe, 1982-1983 Audi 4000, 1982-1983 Audi 4000, 1983-1986 Audi Quattro, 1984-1984 Audi 4000, 1984-1987 Audi 4000 Quattro, 1985-1985 Audi 5000, 1985-1986 Audi 4000, 1986-1986 Audi 5000, 1987-1987 Audi 5000
Add Trim and Engine info to ensure a guaranteed fit
Vehicle: DeLorean
Quantity1
Item LocatedUnited States
Part interchange
11027, J3240083, 3238765, 91160612300, 94460613300, 0025421218
item #1002AYHA
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Oxygen Sensor - Upstream - Bosch 11032
BoschPart # 11032
Oxygen Sensor - Upstream - Bosch 11032
4.65 Reviews
$65.99
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3-year warranty
90 days free return
Fits 1981-1982 Alfa Romeo GTV-6, 1982-1985 Alfa Romeo Spider, 1979-1981 BMW 528i, 1979-1983 BMW 320i, 1979-1984 BMW 733i, 1980-1984 BMW 633CSi, 1982-1987 BMW 528e, 1983-1984 BMW 533i, 1984-1984 BMW 318i, 1985-1985 BMW 318i, 1981-1983 DeLorean DMC 12, 1980-1982 Peugeot 505, 1984-1985 Peugeot 505, 1985-1985 Renault Fuego, 1985-1986 Renault R18i, 1986-1987 Saab 900, 1986-1987 Saab 900, 1977-1980 Volvo 242, 1977-1980 Volvo 244, 1977-1980 Volvo 245
Add Trim and Engine info to ensure a guaranteed fit
Vehicle: DeLorean
Quantity1
Installation PositionUpstream
Item LocatedUnited States
Part interchange
11032, 11761277565, 11761466063, 2269019B10, 7700729963, 162858, 7534795, 1274367, 
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item #1002C2D8
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Your O2 sensors control everything from fuel economy to emissions. They tell your engine computer exactly how much fuel to inject by measuring oxygen levels in your exhaust. When they go bad, you'll feel it in your wallet at the gas pump and see it when your check engine light comes on.

Replacement Oxygen Sensor: What It Does for Fuel Economy and Emissions

A replacement oxygen sensor (also called an O2 sensor) measures oxygen content in exhaust gases and reports that data to the engine control unit (ECU)—your vehicle’s engine computer. Using this signal, the ECU adjusts the air fuel mixture to maintain the correct air fuel ratio. When oxygen sensors work correctly, they support engine efficiency, smoother engine performance, and better fuel economy while reducing harmful emissions across the vehicle’s emissions system.

Your O2 sensors control everything from fuel economy to emissions. They tell your engine computer exactly how much fuel to inject by measuring oxygen levels in your exhaust. When they go bad, you'll feel it in your wallet at the gas pump and see it when your check engine light comes on.

When a sensor degrades, the signal can drift or respond slowly once the sensor reaches operating temperature. That can push the fuel mixture rich, creating unburnt fuel, higher exhaust emissions, and added load on the catalytic converter—often showing up as decreased fuel efficiency and drivability changes.

Bad Oxygen Sensor Symptoms You Shouldn’t Ignore

A bad oxygen sensor commonly triggers an illuminated check engine light (or engine light / check engine light). Beyond the light, you may notice poor gas mileage, poor acceleration, or rough idling—especially on modern vehicles where the ECU relies heavily on accurate oxygen feedback to stabilize the air-fuel strategy.

In many cases, the sensor doesn’t fail instantly. The sensor slowly underreports or overreports oxygen levels, so the ECU keeps “correcting” in the wrong direction. Over time, that can reduce vehicle’s performance, increase emissions output (and risk failing emissions testing), and contribute to potential damage in downstream components such as the catalytic converter.

Watch For These Warning Signs:

Check engine light: Codes P0130-P0167 mean sensor problems

Terrible gas mileage: 20-40% worse fuel economy overnight

Rough idle: Engine shakes, stalls, or surges at stop lights

Failed emissions: Won't pass smog test, can't register your vehicle

Rotten egg smell: Catalytic converter overheating from bad fuel mixture

How to Choose the Right O2 Sensor and Install for Proper Functionality

Selection starts with fitment and position. Many vehicles use multiple oxygen sensors, including upstream units that influence air-fuel control and downstream sensors that help monitor catalytic converter efficiency. Confirm the correct location (upstream/downstream) and match the sensor to your exact vehicle model to ensure connector type, harness length, and the correct heater circuit specification.

For long-term proper functionality, also address common causes of early sensor failure:

  • Exhaust leaks near the exhaust pipe can pull in outside air, skewing readings.
  • Heat and vibration can damage wiring or connections (even a weak battery can expose marginal heater-circuit issues).
  • Contamination can bias readings and lead the ECU to mis-adjust the mixture.

Replacing the correct sensor and ensuring the exhaust path is sealed helps the ECU monitor accurately, adjust efficiently, and restore stable fuel control—delivering a more cost-effective repair over time (including fewer repeat labor costs).

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