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Parts for your 2002 Honda Odyssey-Exhaust gasket
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2002 Honda Odyssey exhaust gasket: what it does and when to sort it
Based on Honda’s factory Service Manual for the 1999–2004 Odyssey and the Honda Electronic Parts Catalogue for the 2002 J35A4 V6, this model absolutely uses exhaust gaskets. The documentation shows multi‑layer steel manifold gaskets at the cylinder heads, a ring/donut gasket at the manifold‑to‑front pipe joint with spring bolts, and additional flat/donut gaskets at downstream flanges around the catalytic converter and muffler joins. So yes—an exhaust gasket is relevant and fitted on a 2002 Honda Odyssey.
On this Odyssey, exhaust gaskets keep hot gases sealed inside the system, quieten the note, and ensure the oxygen sensors get clean, accurate readings. That helps fuel economy, power delivery, and keeps emissions in check. The manifold gaskets handle high heat cycles against the alloy heads, while the front pipe donut lets the joint move a touch as the engine rocks, without creating a leak.
They’re not a routine “time-based” service item, but they should be inspected any time the exhaust is apart or if there are leak symptoms. In Aussie and Kiwi coastal climates, corrosion can hurry things along, so a quick look during regular servicing is smart. Any time a joint is separated, fit new gaskets—reusing old ones is false economy and can cause exhaust leaks, soot, or a raspy tick on cold start.
- Common leak signs: hissing or ticking (especially cold), exhaust smell in the cabin, black soot at a flange, rough idle, or fault codes tied to O2 sensor readings.
- Use quality OEM‑style gaskets (MLS for manifolds, proper graphite/steel donut for the front pipe). Avoid generic paste unless Honda specifies it—most joints are dry-fit.
- Clean mating faces, check studs, nuts, and the manifold spring bolts. Replace tired hardware