Want this question answered?
That is the 64 dollar question, isn't it? Truth is that until you actually replace the sensor no one has any way of knowing if something else is contributing to the problem. Replacing the sensor is a good first step.
You need to BCLear. Why did you replace it? Different reasons need different procedures.
well it depends yes and no you could replace yours with someone else's otherwise no
Weight
Depends on what the smell is and what is causing it. Have the catalytic converter tested before you spend the money to replace it. It maybe something else causing this problem.
Absolutely not. The two are not related in any way. If this was just a personal concern, just replace the intake manifold gasket. If this was what a repair station has quoted or already charged you for, Id go somewhere else or talk to a lawyer respectively.
Probably fuel injectors needing cleaning or replacing. Obver 100K miles replace, false economy to do anything else. Humphreys Nationwide Fuel Injector Services.
No, replace the converter with a new one. Anything else is illegal.
Idler and tensioner pulleys, cam and crank oil seals and pays to do water pump also if it is driven from the timing belt.
Start by replacing spark plugs and wires, also clean the carb, run some fuel system cleaner through it and replace the air filter. What else?
It "CAN", but why would you want to? The contacts in the solenoid wear at about the same rate as everything else inside the starter. If the solenoid is bad you'll be better off just replacing the whole thing because the brushes or bushings will be going next then you'll get to remove/replace the starter again.
If the timing belt drives the water pump you should also replaced it at the same time. Also inspect the tensioner and replace as necessary.