"Low Oil" Light
#1
"Low Oil" Light
i've got an intermittent "low oil" light and it's starting to bug me. If the light comes on when I start the car, it will stay on until I shut the engine off -- no matter how far I drive or how quickly I shut it off. If the light comes on and I immediately shut it off and restart it will go away and stay off.
I have replaced the oil level sensor (was leaking badly) and the engine wiring harness (not for this problem -- solved several other problems though). Any ideas why I'm getting this intermittently? Probably comes on about every 7 or 8 times I start the car.
Thanks!
~ Timothy
I have replaced the oil level sensor (was leaking badly) and the engine wiring harness (not for this problem -- solved several other problems though). Any ideas why I'm getting this intermittently? Probably comes on about every 7 or 8 times I start the car.
Thanks!
~ Timothy
#3
If it were an intermittent short, wouldn't the light flicker on and off while driving? It's either on or off, and the only way I've been able to reset it is to shut the car off and restart it.
Thanks!
~ Timothy
#4
Village Troll
iTrader: (2)
It may only be making intermittent communication with the sensor. Mine is unplugged because of headers and Canton pan and would do the same thing until I jumped the plug- Stay on and wouldn't go off unless engine was restarted. Unplug the sensor, jump the plug and see what happens. If it stays off you've pretty much isolated your problem.
#6
TECH Veteran
i've got an intermittent "low oil" light and it's starting to bug me. If the light comes on when I start the car, it will stay on until I shut the engine off -- no matter how far I drive or how quickly I shut it off. If the light comes on and I immediately shut it off and restart it will go away and stay off.
I have replaced the oil level sensor (was leaking badly) and the engine wiring harness (not for this problem -- solved several other problems though). Any ideas why I'm getting this intermittently? Probably comes on about every 7 or 8 times I start the car.
Thanks!
~ Timothy
I have replaced the oil level sensor (was leaking badly) and the engine wiring harness (not for this problem -- solved several other problems though). Any ideas why I'm getting this intermittently? Probably comes on about every 7 or 8 times I start the car.
Thanks!
~ Timothy
Trending Topics
#8
Shbox -- thanks for the information. Makes sense that it would be a one-time read signal with a timeout before it would display an error again. Still, cannot figure out why it only happens occassionally. Someone mentioned display/warning light problems as an early indication of charging problems, but I don't think this is the case.
Gonna have to do some more research on this...
Thanks again!
~ Timothy
#11
Funny...I had the same problem with the coolant level sensor. I drained and flushed the cooling system (radiator, block, heater core, reservoir) and removed/cleaned the sensor. Haven't had a problem with it since. Now, if I could just get the oil level sensor to behave...
~ Timothy
~ Timothy
#12
TECH Regular
iTrader: (3)
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Fontana, Ca
Posts: 432
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
My car does the samething. I broke the original when I rebuilt my engine and bought a replacement at vatozone. I'm thinking its just a shitty China sensor that was never any good to begin with. What I do now is turn the key to the on position till the fuel pump cycles on then off, then turn the key off for a few seconds, then turn it back on. Once the low oil light shuts off I click it over to start.
#13
TECH Fanatic
iTrader: (4)
The oil light issue is an ongoing issue and most of just do without it. Ive heard some folks just cutting the connector off and splicing the two wires together which will turn off the light. When i put my new motor in for some the sensor in the pan i know was bad but i plugged my harness into it and its not lighting up on the dash but is tripping a code so go figure that lol?
The coolant light is also another common issue mine i just unlugged it from the rad and problem solved it doesnt really have any use as you should be watching your dash to see if it spikes.
The oil should be checked on a normal routine so the switch is not needed and most of us on here are modded so its common sence to check. The coolant as i just stated should be something to keep your eye on all the time.
#16
formerly 1BADC10 (12/14/2011)
iTrader: (2)
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: P-ville, LA
Posts: 2,135
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Convinced the oil level switch is common on ALL LT1s. My Imp SS will no longer have a switch connector after the next oil change. Doing as suggested earlier... jumping the wires. I check my oil every other week (as often as I drive it).
#17
That's MISTER MODERATOR
iTrader: (9)
This oil level switch was used in many GM cars from 1992 through 2002 including the 98 and up F-Bodies.
Neither my 94 or 99 Firebirds had the problem listed here. I still suggest going to six quarts JUST AS A TEST to see if the problem goes away. The owners manual puts the oil capacity with filter at 4.5 quarts. I suggest doing this test to be absolutly certain the oil level is above the sensor. You don't even need to run the engine to do this.
If slightly overfilling it doesn't cure the problem, you may have a bad oil level sensor-even if it's new.
The oil level sensing system that GM put on millions of cars works. There's no reason to think it's always bad and should be eliminated/bypassed. This is a system that generally works well.
This is from a GM operations/service guide:
"PCM checks engine oil level during engine start-up. If oil level switch indicates oil level is low, PCM will send this information through the serial data to the Instrument Panel Cluster (IPC) to illuminate the "Low Oil Level" warning light. Oil level is checked once per ignition cycle and also after
ignition is turned off to allow oil enough time to drain back into oil pan."
Going with this description, I'm thinking it's possible that, for some reason, during cranking your oil level is dropping very low. Do you have a high volume oil pump in this engine?
Neither my 94 or 99 Firebirds had the problem listed here. I still suggest going to six quarts JUST AS A TEST to see if the problem goes away. The owners manual puts the oil capacity with filter at 4.5 quarts. I suggest doing this test to be absolutly certain the oil level is above the sensor. You don't even need to run the engine to do this.
If slightly overfilling it doesn't cure the problem, you may have a bad oil level sensor-even if it's new.
The oil level sensing system that GM put on millions of cars works. There's no reason to think it's always bad and should be eliminated/bypassed. This is a system that generally works well.
This is from a GM operations/service guide:
"PCM checks engine oil level during engine start-up. If oil level switch indicates oil level is low, PCM will send this information through the serial data to the Instrument Panel Cluster (IPC) to illuminate the "Low Oil Level" warning light. Oil level is checked once per ignition cycle and also after
ignition is turned off to allow oil enough time to drain back into oil pan."
Going with this description, I'm thinking it's possible that, for some reason, during cranking your oil level is dropping very low. Do you have a high volume oil pump in this engine?