I was off topic and was hoping to learn more about our engine sensors. When do they start losing calibration before a CEL comes on from an automotive engineer.While browsing broadly to learn, I came across grounding kits that are meant to replace factory wires, for the same reasons you replaced functioning sensors. So far the only factory grounding wire that I found to be stand-alone, is the cylinder-to-chassis on the passenger side. It looks thin next to my 6 gauge battery cable. I assume thicker is better. Are there any other factory grounding wires that are easy to replace? Most others seem to diverge from bundle of wires. Thank you!
Do they age though?Ground wires don't go bad like sensors. They are not wear items.
Do they age though?
X2 on age. If you live in an area that puts chemicals on the roads in the winter, ground connectors can corrod.Ground wires' copper can corrode (though high-grade wiring that's tinned and wrapped helps). The ring ends can corrode. But I wouldn't think any more so than existing ground wires. I'd call it a "for the life of the car" type part. Unless seeing severe salt-laden air (near coastlines) or if getting wet frequently (ie, hosing down the engine bay), perhaps.