An O2 sensor of any type is simply a measuring device that puts out a signal based on what it measures, no more no less. Every sensor has a tolerance of how accurately it measures things and most of the time that is a non-linear curve. So while it maybe more or less accurate at different points along the output curve it will still give a reading. That said, without knowing the accuracy curve and tolerance of a sensor you cannot tell what is what, for sure. This is true with ALL sensors and is just why when any sensor gets used, you must follow and know the manufactures specifications.
This is why I find it so funny that people seem to believe that the use of a Broad Band O2 sensor used out of the manufacture specifications is the best thing in the world and they blindly follow what it shows. Then when it's proven that the sensor is being used incorrectly all hell breaks out and they cry foul!
Andy
So what you are saying is your looking at scatter plots to identify something that looks out of the normal pattern to you. There is no measurement and no accuracy at all with it, so there is no scale to work with at all as there is none. Once you SEE something in the scatter plot that looks out of the normal you still have to go back to the data to find what may or maynot be the cause of it. How is this anything different than what has been done for the past 30+ years?
"To answer the original post, no you can not use the high o2 voltage to tune the WOT portion of the tune but you definitely can use what you learned at low and medium power to better predict what the motor will need for fueling at the top end. Low voltage at near WOT is almost always a dead giveaway that you are way lean."Just what Vtune has done since we introduced it back in 2008, glad you have come to the same conclusion we told you about 5 years ago. Now to add to it, we can also add in the O2 sensor output to give yet another test point to more accurately predict what WOT fueling needs to be. If you can also know (which we do

) the accuracy curve of the sensor it adds yet another test point. The more pieces of the puzzle you have the closer and closer you can get.