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Parts for your 1999 Suzuki Vitara-Map sensor
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1999 Suzuki Vitara MAP sensor: is it fitted on AU/NZ models?
Short answer for Australia and New Zealand–spec 1999 Suzuki Vitara and Grand Vitara: a MAP sensor isn’t fitted and isn’t part of the engine management on the common petrol engines of that year. The factory Suzuki Service Manual for the SQ416/SQ420/SQ625 series (1999–2002, Engine Control System) details a Mass Air Flow (MAF) sensor-based system and lists no Manifold Absolute Pressure (MAP) sensor. This is echoed by Autodata technical information for 1998–2005 models, and by Denso/NGK AU/NZ sensor catalogues, which list MAF part numbers for these engines but no MAP sensor.
Why no MAP? The 1999 AU/NZ Vitara/Grand Vitara engines (notably the J20A 2.0 four-cylinder and H25A 2.5 V6) were designed around a MAF strategy. The MAF measures the actual air mass entering the engine, so the ECU doesn’t need a separate MAP sensor to estimate load via manifold pressure (the “speed-density” approach). With the MAF, intake air temperature, throttle position, and engine speed, the ECU can manage fuelling and ignition precisely without a MAP input.
Worth noting for owners who’ve heard otherwise: older or different-market Vitaras using the G16B 1.6-litre engine did use a MAP sensor in a speed-density setup. That engine wasn’t the mainstream fit for AU/NZ in 1999. If in doubt, check the engine code on the build plate and compare to the sensor layout shown in the Suzuki workshop manual for your exact variant.
- Chasing “MAP” faults on a 1999 AU/NZ Vitara? Look at the MAF first. Rough idle, hesitation, or lean codes often trace back to a dirty or faulty MAF, vacuum leaks, or unmetered air after the MAF.
- Service tip: inspect the intake ducting for splits, ensure clamps are snug, and clean the MAF with a proper MAF-safe cleaner (never touch the element). Reset trims and recheck.
- If a scan tool shows a generic P0106/P0107/P0108 “MAP” code on these models, it’s typically the ECU’s calculated manifold pressure going out of range due to MAF issues, air leaks, or exhaust/O2 sensor problems—not a missing MAP sensor.
Technical sources referenced: Suzuki Grand Vitara (SQ416/SQ420/SQ625) Service Manual, Engine Control System, 1999–2002, Autodata Technical Data and Service Schedules for Suzuki Vitara/Grand Vitara 1998–2005, Denso and NGK/NTK AU/NZ sensor catalogues.
- Where is the MAP sensor on a 1999 Suzuki Vitara?
On AU/NZ-spec 1999 models with the J20A 2.0 or H25A 2.5, there isn’t a MAP sensor. They use a MAF on the air intake near the airbox. If you’re searching under the bonnet for a MAP, you won’t find one because it wasn’t fitted for these engines. - Why does my scan tool show a MAP-related code if there’s no MAP sensor?
The ECU still calculates manifold pressure from other inputs. If the MAF is dirty/faulty, there’s a vacuum leak, or readings are implausible, the ECU can log a generic “MAP” performance code. Focus diagnosis on the MAF, intake leaks, and sensor wiring. - Can a MAP sensor be retrofitted to a 1999 Vitara?
Not practically. The ECU is calibrated for a MAF system. Retrofitting a MAP would require custom ECU strategies and tuning, which isn’t worthwhile for standard servicing or reliability.