P2195 - Bank 1 sensor 1 oxygen sensor




The suv seems to run fine, except for the fuel economy that took a hit.
Last edited by Potrice; Jan 8, 2026 at 12:20 PM.




375 000 km (about 233 000 miles).
Had a check engine light for the bank 1 sensor 1 oxygen sensor.
I replaced the sensor and
The check engine light reappeared this morning with the code P2195.
Not the same code as before, but it's still related to the bank 1 sensor 1 oxygen sensor.
I wonder if anyone else had a problem like this? Could a vacuum or exhaust leak cause this code?
The suv seems to run fine, except for the fuel economy that took a hit.
Do you happen to have the old sensor on hand ?
Check old sensor for oil contamination inside the harness connector.
"Stuck-Lean" fault is not fuel pump related because bank2 reports fine.
This is a MAP engine, not MAF vac. leak.
> Do you pretty much trust your new sensor part:
part number match and supplier trusted?
BTW after this is all settled out you'll need to replace bank2 upstream also to keep engine balanced - (Don't bother Downstreams sensors).

Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Jan 8, 2026 at 06:32 PM.




Do you happen to have the old sensor on hand ?
Check old sensor for oil contamination inside the harness connector.
"Stuck-Lean" fault is not fuel pump related because bank2 reports fine.
This is a MAP engine, not MAF vac. leak.
> Do you pretty much trust your new sensor part:
part number match and supplier trusted?
BTW after this is all settled out you'll need to replace bank2 upstream also to keep engine balanced - (Don't bother Downstreams sensors).

I ordered a quality Bosch O2 sensor, made in Germany.
https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/mer...sch-0065421718
I'll install it this week and I'll update this thread if the code comes back. I'll return the cheap one from Amazon (hopefully I can).
Last edited by Potrice; Jan 19, 2026 at 08:31 AM.
I ordered a quality Bosch O2 sensor, made in Germany.
https://www.fcpeuro.com/products/mer...sch-0065421718
I'll install it this week and I'll update this thread if the code comes back. I'll return the cheap one from Amazon (hopefully I can).




By the way, the check engine light hasn't returned since the new Bosch oxygen sensor was installed. So far so good...




By the way, the check engine light hasn't returned since the new Bosch oxygen sensor was installed. So far so good...
Now Bk2 needs the exact same thing ASAP so both banks remain identical.




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What is going on here? Wiring damage? I'll take a look at it this weekend. The suv runs fine and fuel mileage seems the same. No apparent symptoms other than the CEL. Could the ECM be the culprit?




What is going on here? Wiring damage? I'll take a look at it this weekend. The suv runs fine and fuel mileage seems the same. No apparent symptoms other than the CEL. Could the ECM be the culprit?
It's time to compare the harness values at ECU or all the eay at exhaust harness connector.
M276 lambda pinout sample
Looks like the +12V power source is shared ie. ok!
The GND side is switched by the ECU to manage the heater current.
Use an oscilloscope to see +12V square pulses.
50/50 chance something wiring is going to turn up...
No colateral codes from a good MB scanner?
then compare Bk1 vs.2 live data.
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Mar 9, 2026 at 09:19 AM.




It's time to compare the harness values at ECU or all the eay at exhaust harness connector.
M276 lambda pinout sample
50/50 chance something wiring is going to turn up...
No colateral codes from a good MB scanner?
then compare Bk1 vs.2 live data.




- The +12V side is sharing fuse.
- The current is controlled by ECU on the GND side with a pulse to GND.
Compare both banks live values.
> Different point of view....
-- I'm getting the sense Lambda is flagging something wrong with the engine -
-- We've been assuming "Bad sensor" where sensor may really be measuring something true about the engine.
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Mar 9, 2026 at 09:53 AM.




It turned out to be a leak in the silver/grey pipe on the right of the turbo. The pipe has 2 gaskets, a green one where it connects near the turbo on top and a black one that goes on the other end at the bottom. The person who worked on my car before (I know excatly which shop!) added silicone instead of using the green gasket... resulting in a leak and oil spewing everywhere in the back of the engine, near where the EGR valve is. This caused the B1S1 O2 sensor to be out of whack and throw the code. While I was in there changing the gaskets, I noticed an oil leak near the back of the engine, near the turbo. My PCV valve was shot and I replaced it. I suppose it was 13 years old and had 380 000 km. I think it was the original one. I plan on inspecting it very often. I'll probably change it every 100 000 km as a maintenance/precaution item.
So if you ever get a B1S1 oxygen sensor code, check the gaskets in the pipe around the turbo first! My original sensor was probably still good... but I replaced it with a new quality Bosch sensor... oh well.
Btw, I'm not a mechanic expert, but it seems the OM642 doesn't have a Bank 2 Sensor 1? My scanner tool only shows one sensor pre cat. Is it possible the OM642 only uses one before the catalytic converter? Maybe a pro or a MB tech can chime in? Based on my visual inspection, I don't see another one...




Upstream pre-cat: S1
Downstream post-cat: S2
You're saying your OM642 has no downstreams sensors: B1/2-S2
Last edited by CaliBenzDriver; Apr 14, 2026 at 08:31 PM.






