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Parts for your 2004 Toyota Land cruiser-Oxygen sensor
Penrite Enviro+ GF-S 5W-30 Engine Oil 5L - EPLUSGF5005
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Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 0W-20 Engine Oil 5L - EPLUS0W20005
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Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 10W-40 Engine Oil 6L - VANSEMI10W40006
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Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 5W-30 Engine Oil 6L - VANSEMI5W30006
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
Penrite Vantage Premium Mineral 15W-40 Engine Oil 6L - VANMIN15W40006
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Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 5W-20 Engine Oil 5L - EPLUS5W20005
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 15W-40 Engine Oil 6L - VANSEMI15W40006
Fitment Notes:
2004 Toyota LandCruiser oxygen sensor: what’s fitted and how to look after it
Referencing Toyota’s factory Repair Manual for the 100 Series (UZJ100/HDJ100), the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for 2004 models, and DENSO service information, the oxygen sensor setup depends on the engine. Petrol 2UZ‑FE LandCruisers use oxygen-sensing hardware (wideband air‑fuel, aka A/F, sensors upstream and conventional O2 sensors downstream). The diesel 1HZ and 1HD‑FTE LandCruisers of this era generally do not use an oxygen sensor in the exhaust stream, relying instead on sensors like MAF, boost and temperature within the diesel management system. The guidance below covers the petrol 2UZ‑FE, where an oxygen sensor is fitted.
On a petrol 2004 LandCruiser, the oxygen sensor system is the quiet achiever that keeps fuel burn tidy and the cat converters happy. The upstream A/F sensors constantly sample exhaust oxygen to help the ECU hit stoichiometric mix for clean, efficient combustion. The downstream O2 sensors then keep an eye on catalytic converter performance. When these sensors age, fuelling drifts rich, economy drops, and the dash can light up with codes such as P013x/P015x. Left alone, a lazy sensor can also shorten the life of the cats.
There isn’t a strict time-based replacement interval in Toyota’s schedule, but in Australian and New Zealand conditions many workshops treat upstream sensors as consumables around 160,000–200,000 km, or sooner if economy tanks, the idle gets a bit lumpy, or a scan shows trims chasing their tail. Downstream sensors are often changed when they set performance or heater faults.
Replacement is straightforward with the right kit. Soak the threads, warm the exhaust slightly, and use a proper O2 socket. Always route the harness exactly as Toyota intended so it can’t chafe on the chassis or touch a hot section. If the new sensor doesn’t come pre‑coated, use a sensor‑safe anti‑seize sparingly on the threads only, and tighten to the torque spec in the Toyota manual. After fitting, clear codes and let the ECU relearn with a decent mix of suburban and highway kilometres.
- Telltales: higher fuel use (litres/100 km), sulphury exhaust pong, hesitant throttle, or a check‑engine lamp.
- Good habits: fix any exhaust leaks ahead of the cats, keep the air filter fresh, and avoid silicone sealants that can poison sensors.
- Diagnostics: a quick look at live data (A/F current or lambda and O2 switching) will confirm if a sensor is getting lazy.
For diesel 1HZ/1HD‑FTE owners: Toyota’s diesel control on these 100 Series doesn’t employ an exhaust oxygen sensor, so there’s nothing missing if you can’t find one. Focus instead on clean air supply, boost integrity, fuel quality, and EGR condition where fitted.
Popular questions about 2004 LandCruiser oxygen sensors
How many oxygen sensors does a 2004 petrol LandCruiser have?
Most 2UZ‑FE 100 Series have four sensors: two upstream wideband A/F sensors (one per bank) and two downstream conventional O2 sensors after the cats. Market variations exist, so it’s smart to confirm by VIN in the Toyota EPC or a visual under the vehicle.
If you see two bungs ahead of the cats and two after, that’s the usual four‑sensor layout. The diesel variants don’t have these sensors at all.
When should the oxygen sensors be replaced?
Toyota doesn’t call them out as periodic items, but many workshops replace the upstream A/F sensors around 160,000–200,000 km if economy or drivability has slipped. Otherwise, replace when fault codes or poor switching behaviour show up on a scan tool.
Downstream O2 sensors are typically replaced on failure or when catalyst efficiency codes appear. Always diagnose first, because exhaust leaks can mimic sensor faults.
Can an oxygen sensor be cleaned, or is replacement the go?
Cleaning is rarely effective and risks damaging the sensing element. If a sensor is contaminated or its heater has failed, replacement is the reliable fix. Use quality, correct‑connector sensors rather than universal splice‑ins to avoid wiring dramas.
After replacement, clear codes and drive so the ECU can complete its readiness checks and settle trims.