Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2003 Toyota Crown-Map sensor

Sort by
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP223GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP223GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$541
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP124

Goss MAP Sensor - MP124

Confirm Vehicle
$605
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP138GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP138GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$636
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP171

Goss MAP Sensor - MP171

Confirm Vehicle
$437
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP198

Goss MAP Sensor - MP198

Confirm Vehicle
$270
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP235GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP235GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,773
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP238GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP238GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,800
Fitment Notes:
See More

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP230GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP230GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,237
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP164GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP164GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,098
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP237GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP237GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,358
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP198GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP198GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$862
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP241GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP241GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$855
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP178GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP178GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$889
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP123

Goss MAP Sensor - MP123

Confirm Vehicle
$521
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP230

Goss MAP Sensor - MP230

Confirm Vehicle
$559
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP243GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP243GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$409
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP139

Goss MAP Sensor - MP139

Confirm Vehicle
$497
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP177GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP177GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$430
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP128GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP128GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$466
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP128

Goss MAP Sensor - MP128

Confirm Vehicle
$353
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP207

Goss MAP Sensor - MP207

Confirm Vehicle
$371
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP203

Goss MAP Sensor - MP203

Confirm Vehicle
$257
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP238

Goss MAP Sensor - MP238

Confirm Vehicle
$220
Fitment Notes:
See More
Fuelmiser MAP Sensor - CMS255

Fuelmiser MAP Sensor - CMS255

Confirm Vehicle
$195
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP239

Goss MAP Sensor - MP239

Confirm Vehicle
$164
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP175

Goss MAP Sensor - MP175

Confirm Vehicle
$151
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss Map Sensor - MP284

Goss Map Sensor - MP284

$657
Fitment Notes:
See More
Showing 118 - 144 of 144 products

2003 Toyota Crown MAP sensor: what it does and how to look after it

Based on technical sources, the 2003 Toyota Crown does use a MAP (Manifold Absolute Pressure) sensor. Toyota’s service literature for both the late S170 series (1JZ-FSE/2JZ-FSE) and the S180 series launched in 2003 (3GR-FSE/4GR-FSE) identifies a MAP or “vacuum/pressure” sensor as part of the engine control system alongside the MAF. See: Toyota Crown S170/S180 Repair Manual – Engine Control (EFI/SFI), Toyota Global Service Information (TIS) Engine Control System sections for 1JZ-FSE and 3GR-FSE, and DENSO engine control component catalogues for early‑2000s Toyota applications. So, for a 2003 Toyota Crown, a MAP sensor is relevant and fitted.

On this model, the MAP sensor reads the absolute pressure inside the intake manifold in kilopascals. The ECU uses that signal for load calculation, altitude/barometric compensation, transient fuel and ignition tweaks, and as a cross‑check to the MAF. It also helps with EGR and VVT-i diagnostics. If the MAP reading is out to lunch, the car can feel doughy off the line, idle roughly, and chew through more petrol than it should.

There’s no set replacement interval, but it’s smart to include MAP checks in regular servicing, especially if the Crown does lots of short trips or has a bit of oily mist in the intake. Typical tell‑tales are a check engine light with codes like P0105–P0108 or P0069, hard starts, or sluggish response.

  • Inspection under the bonnet: confirm the connector is snug, pins aren’t green or crusty, and the sensor’s O‑ring is intact. If there’s a vacuum hose type on your engine variant, make sure it’s not split or soft.
  • Live data check: with ignition on/engine off, MAP should read close to local barometric pressure (~100 kPa at sea level). At hot idle, many healthy petrol engines show roughly 28–45 kPa depending on cams and loads.
  • Cleaning: avoid poking the port. If there’s light residue, a quick burst of electronics‑safe cleaner on the port area is fine, don’t soak it and don’t use anything abrasive.
  • Replacement: use a quality OE‑equivalent sensor. It’s usually a one‑bolt job on the manifold. Nip the bolt up gently (it’s into plastic on many variants), refit the plug, clear codes, and let the ECU relearn idle.
  • Good practice: check for intake leaks and keep the air filter fresh. A tidy intake system helps MAP and MAF agree, which saves fuel and keeps the Crown smooth.

Looked after properly, the MAP sensor quietly keeps the tune sharp, so the Crown pulls cleanly and stays frugal on long Kiwi or Aussie kilometres.

Where is the MAP sensor on a 2003 Toyota Crown?

It’s typically mounted on or near the intake manifold, close to the throttle body, with a small electrical connector and either a direct port or a short vacuum passage. On GR‑series V6 engines it’s a bolt‑on unit into the plenum, on JZ‑series variants it may use a short hose to the manifold.

Can a MAP sensor be cleaned or should it be replaced?

Light contamination can be cleaned with electronics‑safe cleaner directed at the port, but if readings are erratic, the diaphragm is oil‑soaked, or fault codes keep returning, replacement is the go. They’re relatively affordable and quick to swap.

What fault codes point to a MAP issue on a 2003 Crown?

Common ones include P0105 (MAP circuit), P0106 (range/performance), P0107 (low input), P0108 (high input), and P0069 (MAP/Baro correlation). Always confirm with live data and a vacuum leak check before throwing parts at it.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "Where is the MAP sensor on a 2003 Toyota Crown?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "It\u2019s typically mounted on or near the intake manifold, close to the throttle body, with a small electrical connector and either a direct port or a short vacuum passage. On GR\u2011series V6 engines it\u2019s a bolt\u2011on unit into the plenum, on JZ\u2011series variants it may use a short hose to the manifold." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Can a MAP sensor be cleaned or should it be replaced?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Light contamination can be cleaned with electronics\u2011safe cleaner directed at the port, but if readings are erratic, the diaphragm is oil\u2011soaked, or fault codes keep returning, replacement is recommended. They\u2019re relatively affordable and quick to swap." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "What fault codes point to a MAP issue on a 2003 Crown?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Common ones include P0105 (MAP circuit), P0106 (range/performance), P0107 (low input), P0108 (high input), and P0069 (MAP/Baro correlation). Confirm with live data and a vacuum leak check before replacing parts." } } ]}