--- In dmcnews@xxxx, "tmpintnl" <tobyp@xxxx> wrote: > Rendy - I don't believe that the catalytic converter would be involved > in high hydrocarbons. <snip> > Any other thoughts from the rest of you? Since the car described has 30,000 miles on it and the O2 sensor has not been replaced, it sounds to me like it did not yet get it's scheduled 30,000 mile tuneup. I don't have my manual handy, but I seem to recall that the 30K tuneup includes O2 sensor replacement, cap/wires/plugs/rotor/etc, mixture adjustment, timing adjustment, as well as valve adjustment. If your car has not seen its regular scheduled maintenance yet, then you might consider having this done before starting to replace parts. The catalytic converter should have a pretty long life -- I just ran my 150,000 mile DMC through DEQ here in Oregon and it passed fine with the original catalytic converter still on it. Premature catalytic converter failure (and O2 sensor failure as well) can be caused by catalyst contamination sometimes triggered by the use of leaded fuel (lead is only one of several effective catalyst contaminants). I've also seen catalytic converters that have failed mechanically where the honeycomb catalyst has broken up and in the form of rubble in the housing (this also generally resists exhaust flow). Fortunately, the problem you describe sounds like a run-o-the-mill tuneup issue, and it sounds like your car might be due for one anyway. Knut