Lisle 12100 Oxygen Sensor Socket
September 6th, 2009 by admin
Leave a reply »
|
User Reviews
Send this to a friend
|
| Lisle 12100 Oxygen Sensor Socket |
| |
 |
| Manufacturer: Lisle |
| Customer Rating: |
|
| List Price: $20.32 |
| Sale Price: $11.94 |
| Availibility: Usually ships in 24 hours |
Free Shipping Available |
| Buy Now |
|
| |
Product Description |
| Removes and Installs Oxygen Sensors on Most Domestic and Some Imports. |
|
Product Details |
- Special 7/8" socket with cutaway slot to provide clearance for wire harness
- Provides adequate depth to fit over sensor
- Heat-treated alloy steel
- Use with 3/8" square drive or 1" wrench
|
Video Reviews |
No video reviews found for this product.
|
Customer Reviews |
Pleased with my order
|
| Review Date: March 8, 2007 |
| Reviewer: Robert Lewandowski, Northern California |
| My order arrived quickly, and the socket was more heavy-duty than I expected. |
Not for sensors with armadillo cable
|
| Review Date: February 9, 2009 |
| Reviewer: J. Long, San Jose, CA USA |
I bought this tool to replace the oxygen sensor on my 2002 Audi A4. After receiving the tool and the sensor, I realized that the Bosch sensor for Audis comes with a corrugated "armadillo" cable whose diameter is too large for the narrow slot in the side of this socket.
I still rate the socket highly as it's clearly a quality product, just not for oxygen sensors with thicker cables. Try the offset type of oxygen sensor wrench ( Westward 1MUE2 Heated Oxygen Sensor Wrench) for these applications, they work well. |
Don't try to replace an O2 sensor without it
|
| Review Date: February 14, 2009 |
| Reviewer: David Margrave, Bellevue, WA United States |
On my vehicle (1995 Dodge Dakota) there was barely sufficient clearance for a ratchet, but not really any room to ratchet it. I tried various things including forgoing the socket and taking an open end wrench to the old sensor, which just rounded off one of the shoulders. Scratch that idea, back to the socket (which still fit, thankfully). What finally broke it free was liberal use of PB blaster, and the box end of a combo wrench hooked to the top of the socket (see the picture, it's got a hex head as well as socket drive), and a second box-end wrench hooked over the open end of the first (I use this trick a lot) for more leverage. I had to tighten it just a bit to break it free, then was able to loosen it and remove the old part. Without the hex head on this socket I'm not sure how I would have completed the job.
|
It's fine
|
| Review Date: October 6, 2009 |
| Reviewer: Gary A. Wexler, Long Beach, New York United States |
| I used this for my 2000 Volvo V70. It was fine, but as someone said in another review, make sure your car uses a regular wire and not a really thick braided type before you get this one. Also... it's made in the USA, so that's a plus. |
O2 sensor socket
|
| Review Date: July 15, 2010 |
| Reviewer: S. Wilkes, Georgia USA |
| Fast service. This is a well made O2 (oxygen) sensor socket. I purchased this to remove and install the three sensors on my 1999 Lexus RX300...worked perfectly. |
|