Want this question answered?
are the tires the right size, and all the same size, how many did you replace, is it AWD, are they inflated correctly, did you break a sensor taking off or putting on the tires
I had a similar situation shortly after replacing all my tires and though the tires were brand new they did not replace the valve stems and they had slow leaks in two of the four tires, this may be your problem. The tire pressure sensors can be very sensitive.
start by having your ABS sensors checked there is normally one on each wheel located behind the brake disk its might be a bad connection or bad sensor to have a more direct answer we need to know what car it is what year and engine size but a bove will get you started
Possible damaged sensor or wiring to the sensor. The pad sensor is located in the brake pads themselves and changing tires will not affect them unless damaged by tire changer
Check the pressure in all of the tires and inflate them to the pressure indicated on the door jam. The light should go off within a few minutes. If it stays on then you have a bad sensor in the tire or on the car.
Get a new computer, it sounds like this one is pretty well fudged up!!!!
needs new alternator
new tires. If the tires brake, you'll need it
It is located in the exhaust manifold Usually in the lower front of the engine it will have a grey wire coming from it to a plug. simply remove it and replace with a new one. Keep in mind if your O2 sensor is bad you will have a check engine light on.
Try a new knock sensor, or check the distributor
Because it is day time and the light will only switch on at night? A lot of solar lights have a photo sensor, light sensor, that prevents it from using up energy when it is light out. You can cover up the sensor and it will turn on.
The O2 sensor is on its death bed. Get a new one. You'll get better gas mileage.