I bought a 1990 325i in July 2021, have been slowly fixing / restoring it since then. Car came with a rattling cat, which was replaced on 4/2/2022. A flow master cat for the m20 was installed. All was well until 2 weeks ago.. when the new cat started rattling like the old one. Took car back to shop today, where they cut it off and said that it was melted. Asked if I tuned the car. I said no. Asked if I tracked the car, I said “not yet”. Could a tune cause this? Any advice on how to diagnose the air / fuel ratio at the cat?
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Diagnosing a 3 month old flowmaster cat that melted during street driving
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Originally posted by jbontke View PostI had two cats do this on an LS 5.3 engine. They were cheap cats. Are you buying a quality cat (will pass smog test) or a cheap one?
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Running rich or too lean will kill an aftermarket cat. I've blown through several carsound (magnaflow) cats in my day. Assuming your car is stock, check the DME to see what chip is installed. If an aftermarket chip is installed, make sure you're running premium fuel. Then make sure your oxygen sensor is installed properly and in good shape. Many forget that they are service items and should be replaced every 60-80k miles. These will solve most issues but there's also fuel pressure, Air flow meter, etc Only way to know your exact AFR's is by using a Wideband oxygen sensor. Get your AFR's right before you spend money installing another cat or the same thing will keep happening. Goodluck."I'd probably take the E30 M3 in this case just because I love that little car, and how tanky that inline 6 is." - thecj
85 323i M TECH 1 S52 - ALPINEWEISS/SCHWARZE
88 M3 - LACHSSILBER/SCHWARZE
89 M3 - ALPINEWEISS II/M TECH CLOTH-ALCANTARA
91 M TECHNIC CABRIO TURBO - MACAOBLAU/M TECH CLOTH-LEATHER
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Originally posted by reelizmpro View PostRunning rich or too lean will kill an aftermarket cat. I've blown through several carsound (magnaflow) cats in my day. Assuming your car is stock, check the DME to see what chip is installed. If an aftermarket chip is installed, make sure you're running premium fuel. Then make sure your oxygen sensor is installed properly and in good shape. Many forget that they are service items and should be replaced every 60-80k miles. These will solve most issues but there's also fuel pressure, Air flow meter, etc Only way to know your exact AFR's is by using a Wideband oxygen sensor. Get your AFR's right before you spend money installing another cat or the same thing will keep happening. Goodluck.
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