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Pages: [1] 2
1
Maintenance Guides / 'how to' 2.2 Ecotec camshaft sensor
« on: 19 March 2010, 18:39:32 »
CAMSHAFT SENSOR REPLACEMENT
2.2 Ecotec (Y22XE) engine
I replaced the camshaft sensor on my 2000 facelift Omega Estate Automatic to cure the auto box going into ‘limp home mode’ on start up. I hope the following ‘How To’ will help those intending to replace their own camshaft sensor for whatever reason. Please read it all the way through before you start the job as this should help you understand the process.



 The camshaft sensor lives under the timing belt cover at the front of the engine (arrowed). The wire connecting to the camshaft sensor is also arrowed.



The new GM camshaft sensor as it arrived. The GM part number can be clearly seen on the box. Overall length approx. 4” and 1” wide. A small but none the less important piece of kit.



Move this cable trunking (arrowed) out of the way to give better access to the cam sensor when the timing belt cover is removed later. The trunking is held in place by the uppermost bolt holding the timing cover. No need to disconnect the wires but do be careful not to pull too far and damage any connections.



It will be necessary to remove the Aux. drive belt so that the timing belt cover can be removed. First locate the Aux belt tensioner (arrowed) Attach a suitable size socket and long bar. Standing in front of the car push the bar to the right toward the nearside wing. At first glance this may appear to be the wrong direction to loosen the belt, but trust me it’s correct.



Once you have enough slack remove the belt from just the alternator Pulley. I chose to do it this way as it saves having to remove the whole belt and thus having to remember the complicated routing around all the ancillary components.



Next stand up and rest your back for a bit and go to the back of the engine and disconnect the Dis.pack connector. It should come away easily but you may need some “GENTLE” help from a thin bladed screwdriver to ease it off its retaining clips. This will then allow you to remove the Ecotec spark plug cover



Now slide the Ecotec spark plug cover toward the rear of the engine bay about an inch or two. The cover will then lift off easily. Sliding it backward is necessary to avoid damage to the cover retaining lugs that you can’t see till its off. Don’t lever it up with a screwdriver, you’ll break it!



This will reveal the camshaft sensor well, which houses the top of the sensor and its connector plug. Which is a bit fiddly to disconnect.



Disconnect the camshaft sensor connector. As I said it’s a bit fiddly to disconnect because it’s not easy to see how it’s retained. The release clip (arrowed) is on the connector itself. I found it easier to use a screwdriver with the flat part of the blade held against the clip release to put forward (to the front of the car) pressure on the ‘clip’ as I couldn’t get my fingers in very easily. At the same time pull upwards on the connector (not the wire) and if you get the pressure right the connector will come away easily.



Next step is to remove the timing belt cover. The cover is designed to be removed without the need to remove the crankshaft pulley, as I understand was needed on earlier engines. You have already cleared the way for this job by removing the Aux. Drive belt and the cable trunking earlier. Three bolts (positions marked by arrows in the photo) hold the cover on. Once the bolts are removed be patient and fiddle the cover upwards, sideways, back and fore to clear the sprockets underneath.



At last the sensor. It lives underneath the two top camshaft sprockets and is held by one Torx bolt arrowed in the photo.



The sensor comes out upwards through the sensor well. Hang on to the Torx bolt when you fit the new sensor, pound to a penny if you drop it the law of ‘sod’ says you will never find it again.

Refitting is the reverse of removal. The job is very straightforward and took me about an hour and a half with a break for tea and a biscuit in the middle. Once you’ve done it once and gone through the learning curve you could probably do the job in half the time. When done it immediately cured the irritating limp home mode symptoms on my auto box that I’d had for some time. I hope you find the information in this ‘How To’ helpful and that it gives you the confidence to tackle the job yourself.

2
Omega Electrical and Audio Help / sci-fi noises and crackle
« on: 24 July 2010, 11:05:36 »
I have the bog standard factory fitted CDR 2005 fitted to my 2000 estate CD auto. I like to listen to radio 5 (Med.wave 909m) or radio Gold (1548m) on the way to and from work. Often though reception is poor with lots of crackle when driving which makes listening unpleasant and I revert to the CD player or to FM which is OK.The crackle dosen't appear to be related to revs and is reasonably constant whatever the engine speed. Just this week I discovered something I hadn't noticed previously. I was parked up engine off with the radio on (radio always works fine then, with no noises). I turned the ignition on but had not fired up, so engine and starter not engaged, and noticed that as soon as the ignition was on the radio started whistling like the old sci-fi movies soundtrack. Any ideas guys?
VC :question

3
Omega Electrical and Audio Help / iPod adaptor?
« on: 02 April 2010, 16:51:50 »
Being a cool dad, sorry, dude! :D I have an iPod shuffle and Mrs, vic being an even cooler dud'ess' has an iPod nanno 8-).(joke)
 My 2000 facelift estate has a CDR 2005 fitted. Do you guys know if there is an adaptor available that will allow either or both of these bits of kit to play through the car system?
VC :)

4
Omega General Help / Front Shockers!
« on: 11 March 2011, 11:15:18 »
Hi Guys,
Took my 2000 facelift omega estate 2.2 Auto for test earlier
Just been told by the MOT tester on an advisory'  that "Both front shock absorbers have a slightly reduced damping effect" Ball park cost to have it done £350.

Back in the day' I've done the job an a Mk 2 Cortina and a Vauxhall corsa, but never on my miggy'.
Anyone tell me;
* what cost I'm looking at for parts, ie; replacement shocks
* Do we have a How to co's I can't find it as yet?
Many thanks all.
VC :)

5
Omega General Help / Nearside mirror replacement
« on: 10 November 2010, 11:26:12 »
The nearside mirror on my 2000 facelift omega estate got knocked off (broken not stolen).The metal skeleton is still there but the ABS surround is gone along with the glass etc. the motor whirs but dosent seem to move anything at all. I'm thinking it will probably be easier to source a second hand unit and change the whole thing rather than 'faff' around with bits. This raises three questions for me.
a) will the mirror from a facelift saloon fit the estate
b) what price am I looking at for a second hand unit.
c) Whats involved in the job
The car is star silver  (Z147) but if necessary I can respray with an aerosol.
As always guys, youre thoughts and advice would be appreciated.
VC :(

6
Omega General Help / mobile aircon services?
« on: 03 July 2010, 18:11:04 »
I reckon at least one or two of the family fleet of vauxhalls (Omega, Vectra and two astras) need the attention of an aircon man, for a service and regas. Any recomendations from fellow OOfers'
on a reliable mobile or static AC engineer in the Aldershot/Guidford/Woking areas. (Surrey, Hants borders.). :question

7
Omega General Help / Toe rag! smashed my mirror
« on: 04 June 2010, 08:53:28 »
Had a call from my No.2 daughter (chronologicaly speaking), very tearfull, she had borrowed my 2000 facelift omega estate to travel to work, whilst I was fixing her astra.
A motor cycle courier had squeezed through too small a gap between her and another car in the adjoining lane of traffic and smashed out the mirror glass on the nearside of my mig' (Ba****rd !!!!!!!!! >:() He of course is gone in a flash on the way to the scene of his next 'accident'. Mirror housing is OK but glass gone.
Any ideas on cost to replace and or part No please guys?

8
Omega General Help / 4 Pot cambelt DVD
« on: 03 May 2010, 18:43:45 »
Anyone got a copy of the 4 pot cambelt change DVD they can either 'flog on or copy and let me have?
Happy to pay postage. Do PM me if you can help.
VC :question

9
Omega General Help / Testing a dispack?
« on: 09 April 2010, 13:39:36 »
Investigating an intermitent misfire at the moment whilst working my way thru some issues. Is there a way of testing the dispack on a (2000) facelift 2.2 .4 potter, perhaps with a multimeter? There are lots of threads saying " replaced the dispack but misfire still there". At circa £70 a 'pop, I'd rather do some diagnosis first.
Thanks guys.
VC :y

10
Omega General Help / Best Gas conversion
« on: 27 March 2010, 18:25:15 »
Petrol prices are "never" going to go down.
 I still remember my dad said to me 'too many years ago " I don't know why they don't put petrol up to five bob a gallon and have done with it". Those were the days for those old enough to remember, and yes' I was just a 'sprog!
I drive a 2000 facelift 2.2 four pot estate and recently have been considering going dual fuel, but have no idea of the ins and outs'. What do the gas heads on the forum recomend as the best system and what sort of price should I expect to pay for the conversaion. As always your thoughts/opinions are appreciated
VC :)

11
Omega General Help / Coolant Temperature Sensor
« on: 25 March 2010, 21:53:56 »
2.2 Ecotec(Y22XE) in my facelift 2000 estate auto.
I'm trying to tie up any loose ends with my investigations into my recent 'lumpy idle' problems. Today I thought I would check out the coolant temperature sensor's performance  as the car warmed up.
 Didn't do it because I can't find the thing! Doh' :-[

a)can anyone point me at it please?
&
b) has anyone done an underbonnet  layout on the four pot similar to the   Boy's on the V6?
Many thanks guys
VC :)

12
Omega General Help / Lumpy running for 30-60 seconds
« on: 04 March 2010, 16:22:29 »
Omega 2.2 ecotec 2000 estate auto (65k miles)  New GM camshaft sensor fitted two weeks ago after Tech 2 diagnosis.(worked great and solved limp home problems)
At first daily startup OR when car has been left for a minimum 3-4 hours it runs like a dog' engine misfire and wobbles about and sometimes backfires (like the backfires in the carb of my old vauxhall victor or viva). Only does it for the first minute and then disapears altogether and no problem from then on. When playing up I've disconnected the MAF and suddenly it evens out and problem gone. I've done a carb cleaner job on the MAF but that made no difference. I'm doing a cam cover gasket (pukka GM kit) change this weekend and cleaning out all the breathers as the plug wells had oil in them. Is there anything else I should be doing whilst I'm in there to iron out this problem/
As always your thoughts would be appreciated.

13
Omega General Help / Stearing camber and stuff
« on: 28 February 2010, 18:29:06 »
My 2000 Omega Estate 2.2 Auto finally passed it's MOT with a new pre-cat lambda and two new front tyres. Apparently both originals were worn down unevenly on inside edge. I was surprised as this was  not visible on cursory check, but hey waht can you do?. Have seen discussion on the forum  recomending 'www.alignmycar.co.uk' who use laser type alignment kit and have two brancches locally.No point having new tyres for the same wear pattern to repeat itself so am planning to have it all checked. Any idea what the factory set up angles are for my model so that I know what I'm talking about when I book it in, and any idea what I should expect to pay in this part of the world (south east) :question

14
Omega General Help / Failed the emissions help!
« on: 22 February 2010, 17:51:51 »
Got the dreaded phone call from the MOT tester, my omega estate auto (2.2 ecotec) failed on emissions. "Hmmm' he said, could be just a Lamda or maybe the 'cat'. We will need to run a full diagnostice tomorrow, (£49) please, plus whatever it needs to fix it. The car had a full Tech 2 a few weeks ago and to be fair the Lamda did show slightly among half a dozen 'old stored faults.However the problem I was having lead to a new cam sensor being required. I fitted that (howto on way, Photos done, just the write up to do) and it cured my 'limp home problems. If the worst comes to be what am I looking at "£" for one or both.Any suggestions on the best place to get on if I do it myself. Now have a TC

15
Omega General Help / OBDII OR NOT OBDII? .....that is the question
« on: 13 February 2010, 14:48:34 »
Hi Guys!
I drive a W' reg.(june) 2000 Omega Estate Auto with the 2.2 Ecotec engine. Does anyone know if this model is OBDII compliant  :-/ or otherwise?

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