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Parts for your 2001 Toyota Crown-Map sensor

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2001 Toyota Crown MAP sensor — what it does, where it lives, and when to replace it

Based on Toyota’s S170-series Crown service literature — including the Toyota Repair Manual and Electrical Wiring Diagram for JZS17x/GS17x variants, plus the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue — the 2001 Toyota Crown is fitted with a manifold absolute pressure (MAP) sensor. On turbocharged 1JZ-GTE Athlete V models it functions as a boost/pressure sensor, and on naturally aspirated engines such as 1G-FE and 1JZ-FSE it’s listed as a vacuum or manifold pressure sensor used for load calculation assistance, barometric correction, and EGR diagnostics. Denso component references for Toyota part numbers in the 89421-xxxxx family align with these applications.

On this Crown, the MAP sensor’s job is to read the absolute pressure in the intake manifold so the ECU can figure out engine load. That helps the ECU set fuel, ignition timing, and (on turbo versions) keep boost in check. Even on non-turbo models that run a hot‑wire airflow meter, Toyota still uses a manifold pressure/vacuum sensor for baro correction and OBD checks, so it’s a relevant bit of kit across the range.

Signs the MAP sensor or its hose is having a moment include rough idle, lazy throttle response, higher fuel use, hard starting, and the odd stall. The dash might light up with codes like P0105, P0106, P0107 or P0108. A quick check with a scan tool helps: with key on, engine off, MAP should read close to local atmospheric pressure, at warm idle it’ll drop notably.

Good servicing keeps the Crown happy:

  • Inspect the vacuum hose to the MAP sensor for splits, oil soak, or loose fits.
  • Make sure the manifold port isn’t carboned up, clean the port and hose, not the sensor’s innards.
  • If fitted to the plenum with an O‑ring, replace the O‑ring when the sensor comes out.
  • Avoid blasting the sensing port with cleaners or poking it — that can kill it.

Replacement is straightforward: unplug the connector, remove the retaining screw(s), lift the sensor off, swap the O‑ring, and reinstall snugly (light torque). Use a quality Denso/Toyota unit, cheapies can skew readings and waste petrol. After fitting, clear any fault codes and take it for a gentle drive so the ECU trims settle. For turbo Crowns, confirm boost control behaves — no spiking or limp mode. For daily use around Aotearoa and Australia, a quick look at the hose and connector every service interval (10,000–15,000 km) is usually all it needs.

Where is the MAP sensor on a 2001 Toyota Crown?

On turbo Athlete V models (1JZ-GTE), it’s typically mounted on the firewall or inner guard with a short hose to the manifold or intercooler piping. On naturally aspirated variants, it’s commonly bolted to the intake manifold or nearby bracket, with a small vacuum hose running to a nipple on the plenum.

Look for a small rectangular Denso sensor with a three‑pin connector and a single vacuum port. If in doubt, trace the hose from the manifold pressure nipple to the sensor body.

What fault codes point to a dodgy MAP sensor on the Crown?

Common ECU trouble codes include P0105 (MAP/Baro circuit), P0106 (range/performance), P0107 (low input) and P0108 (high input). These can be triggered by a faulty sensor, a split or oil‑logged vacuum hose, or corroded connectors.

Before replacing the sensor, check live data: with ignition on, MAP should be close to ambient pressure, at idle, it should drop. If readings are nonsense, confirm hose integrity and 5V reference/ground at the plug.

Do non‑turbo Crowns still use a MAP sensor?

Yes. Even where a hot‑wire airflow meter is the primary load sensor, Toyota fits a manifold pressure/vacuum sensor for barometric correction, EGR monitoring, and plausibility checks. It’s still a key input for stable fuelling and diagnostics.

So whether it’s a 1G‑FE, 1JZ‑FSE, or a 1JZ‑GTE turbo, there’s a pressure sensor in the mix that deserves a quick look during servicing.