Today: The case of the buzzing oil light.

Dear Car Talk | Jan 01, 1995
Dear Tom and Ray:
Josephine
RAY: What your mechanic doesn't realize, Josephine, is that this car has two oil sensors. One turns on the warning light and buzzer when the oil pressure is too low, and a second one sounds the alarm when the oil pressure is too high. My guess is that your high pressure sensor is the one that's going off.
TOM: He's probably put his own gauge on your engine, and determined that you don't have LOW oil pressure. That's why he feels confident telling you to forget about it. What he has to do now is use his gauge to determine whether you have HIGH oil pressure.
RAY: I've managed to convince my brother that this test can only be done while the car is moving. So I always strap him to the top of the engine, close the hood as best I can, and have him take a reading while I drive around at high speed.
TOM: But in reality, all your mechanic has to do is hook up his gauge, and rev the engine while he takes a reading, because the oil pressure is directly related to the speed of the engine, not the speed of the car.
RAY: If he does find a high pressure problem, a new pressure relief valve will probably solve it. If the pressure is fine (and you're still getting the light and buzzer), the problem could just be a faulty sensor. Good luck, Josephine.
Josephine
RAY: What your mechanic doesn't realize, Josephine, is that this car has two oil sensors. One turns on the warning light and buzzer when the oil pressure is too low, and a second one sounds the alarm when the oil pressure is too high. My guess is that your high pressure sensor is the one that's going off.
TOM: He's probably put his own gauge on your engine, and determined that you don't have LOW oil pressure. That's why he feels confident telling you to forget about it. What he has to do now is use his gauge to determine whether you have HIGH oil pressure.
RAY: I've managed to convince my brother that this test can only be done while the car is moving. So I always strap him to the top of the engine, close the hood as best I can, and have him take a reading while I drive around at high speed.
TOM: But in reality, all your mechanic has to do is hook up his gauge, and rev the engine while he takes a reading, because the oil pressure is directly related to the speed of the engine, not the speed of the car.
RAY: If he does find a high pressure problem, a new pressure relief valve will probably solve it. If the pressure is fine (and you're still getting the light and buzzer), the problem could just be a faulty sensor. Good luck, Josephine.
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