Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 1997 Suzuki Jimny-Temperature sensors
Explore 4WD & Adventure
1997 Suzuki Jimny temperature sensors — purpose, care, and replacement
Temperature sensors are absolutely relevant on a 1997 Suzuki Jimny. Factory technical sources — Suzuki Jimny JA12/JA22 Service Manual (1995–1998), early JB23/JB33 wiring diagrams, and Suzuki parts catalogues of the era — show the vehicle uses an Engine Coolant Temperature (ECT) sensor for the engine control unit, a separate sender for the dash gauge, and, on EFI-equipped models, an Intake Air Temperature (IAT) sensor. These sensors are core to fuelling, idle quality, cold-start strategy, and electric radiator fan control, so keeping them healthy is smart preventative maintenance on any Aussie or Kiwi Jimny that’s still doing the rounds.
The ECT sensor tells the ECU how hot the engine is so it can enrich on cold starts, trim fuelling as it warms up, and trigger the fan via a relay. The dash sender feeds the temperature gauge so the driver can spot overheating early. The IAT sensor keeps mixtures tidy across different ambient conditions. When these go out of whack, the Jimny can run rich, idle too high, chew through fuel, or kick the fan on at odd times.
- Common symptoms: hard cold starts, rough idle, black exhaust smoke, poor economy, temp gauge dead or erratic, cooling fan stuck on or never coming on, and stored temp-sensor fault codes.
- Quick checks: look for green crust on plugs, brittle connectors, damaged wiring, and coolant leaks around the sensor boss. Confirm coolant level and bleed air after any cooling-system work.
Replacement is straightforward with basic tools:
- Let the engine cool fully and disconnect the battery.
- Drain a little coolant to drop the level below the sensor.
- Unplug the connector and remove the sensor with the correct deep socket.
- Install the new OEM-quality sensor (Denso/NTK equivalent), using the specified sealing washer or sealant as per the Suzuki manual. Torque to the factory spec.
- Refill coolant, bleed the system, reconnect, and check for leaks and fault codes.
There’s no fixed interval for replacing temperature sensors