P0466: EVAP Purge Flow Sensor Circuit Range/Performance
What Does P0466 Mean?
P0466 is a generic powertrain DTC indicating: EVAP Purge Flow Sensor Circuit Range/Performance. This relates to the vehicle's emission control systems.
The emission control system reduces harmful exhaust pollutants through several subsystems: EGR (Exhaust Gas Recirculation) recirculates a portion of exhaust back into the intake to lower combustion temperatures and reduce NOx. The secondary air injection system pumps fresh air into the exhaust during cold starts to help the catalytic converter light off faster. The catalytic converter converts CO, HC, and NOx into CO2, H2O, and N2. The EVAP system captures fuel vapors from the tank and purges them into the engine for combustion. When any of these systems malfunction, the vehicle will fail emissions testing and the ECM will set a DTC.
Symptoms of P0466
- β οΈ Check engine light on
- β οΈ Failed emissions/smog test
- β οΈ Possible rough idle or stalling (EGR stuck open)
- β οΈ Fuel smell (EVAP leak)
- β οΈ Reduced performance in some cases
- β οΈ Increased tailpipe emissions
Common Causes
- π Carbon buildup causing EGR valve to stick
- π EVAP system leak (gas cap, hose, canister, purge valve)
- π Catalytic converter below efficiency threshold (aging)
- π Secondary air pump failure or check valve stuck
- π Wiring or vacuum line issue in emission control circuit
Diagnostic Tips
- For EVAP codes: start with the gas cap β tighten it and clear the code. If it returns, use a smoke machine to find the leak
- For EGR codes: remove and inspect the EGR valve β carbon buildup causing sticking is extremely common and cleanable
- For catalyst codes: check upstream O2 sensor first β a bad sensor can falsely report low catalyst efficiency
- For secondary air codes: listen for the air pump running during cold start β it should run for 30-90 seconds
- Check vacuum hoses connected to emission components β cracked or disconnected hoses are cheap, common fixes
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- β Replacing the catalytic converter based on a P0420/P0430 code alone β diagnose the root cause first (O2 sensor, exhaust leak, engine running rich)
- β Ignoring a loose gas cap as the cause of EVAP codes β this is literally the #1 cause and the cheapest fix
- β Using aftermarket catalytic converters in states with strict emissions laws (California) β CARB-compliant converters are required
- β Cleaning the EGR valve without cleaning the EGR passages in the intake manifold β the passages clog too
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I pass emissions with a check engine light on?
Can I just clear the code before emissions testing?
How much does a catalytic converter cost?
What To Do Next
Possible Fixes
- π§ Clean or replace EGR valve
- π§ Replace gas cap (EVAP codes)
- π§ Replace EVAP purge or vent solenoid
- π§ Replace catalytic converter
- π§ Replace secondary air pump or check valve
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