Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 2004 Toyota Mark x-Oxygen sensor

Sort by
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA642-EE17
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA642-EE17

Confirm Vehicle
$228
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX717

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX717

Confirm Vehicle
$220
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX602

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX602

Confirm Vehicle
$210
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA668-EE44
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA668-EE44

Confirm Vehicle
$217
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX729

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX729

Confirm Vehicle
$217
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA739-EE45
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA739-EE45

Confirm Vehicle
$195
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE15
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE15

Confirm Vehicle
$189
Fitment Notes:
See More

Explore 4WD & Adventure

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA751-EE15
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA751-EE15

Confirm Vehicle
$205
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE11
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE11

Confirm Vehicle
$195
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA510-AU9
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA510-AU9

Confirm Vehicle
$197
Fitment Notes:
See More
Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS114

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS114

Confirm Vehicle
$172
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX597

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX597

Confirm Vehicle
$162
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - AFR722-EE21
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - AFR722-EE21

Confirm Vehicle
$579
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA686-EE6
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA686-EE6

Confirm Vehicle
$317
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss oxygen sensor vw/skoda - OX931

Goss oxygen sensor vw/skoda - OX931

Confirm Vehicle
$350
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA341-F26
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA341-F26

Confirm Vehicle
$519
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA821-EE1
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA821-EE1

Confirm Vehicle
$391
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA426-M12
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA426-M12

Confirm Vehicle
$502
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA873-EE3
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA873-EE3

Confirm Vehicle
$436
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA816-EE14
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA816-EE14

Confirm Vehicle
$397
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA811-EE18
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA811-EE18

Confirm Vehicle
$349
Fitment Notes:
See More
NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA528-C6
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA528-C6

Confirm Vehicle
$328
Fitment Notes:
See More
Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS130

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS130

$368
Fitment Notes:
See More
Showing 664 - 686 of 686 products

2004 Toyota Mark X oxygen sensor: what it does and when to replace it

Technical sources confirm the 2004 Toyota Mark X uses oxygen-sensing hardware. The Toyota Mark X (GRX120/GRX121) repair manual for the 4GR‑FSE and 3GR‑FSE engines specifies front air–fuel ratio (A/F) sensors and rear heated oxygen sensors for closed‑loop fuel control and catalyst monitoring. The Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue lists corresponding Denso sensor part numbers for both banks, and Toyota diagnostic documentation (SAE J1979 OBD‑II) outlines related fault codes. So yes, an oxygen sensor system is fitted and relevant on the 2004 Mark X.

On this model, the upstream A/F sensors (one per bank) fine‑tune the fuel mix, while the downstream oxygen sensors (one per bank) keep tabs on catalytic converter efficiency. Together they help the V6 run smoothly, sip less fuel, and meet emissions standards. When the sensors age, drivers may notice higher fuel use, a check‑engine light, faint sulphur smells, or rougher idle. Common codes include P0135/P0155 (heater circuit), P0136/P0156 (sensor signal), and P0420/P0430 (catalyst efficiency, often triggered by tired sensors or exhaust leaks).

As wear items, these sensors don’t last forever. A practical guideline for a Mark X is to inspect around 120,000–160,000 km and replace when trims are drifting, response is lazy, or codes set. The direct‑injection 4GR/3GR engines can be tougher on sensors, so earlier replacement isn’t unusual. Genuine or high‑quality Denso equivalents are preferred, and it pays to match the exact bank and sensor type—A/F sensors are not the same as rear O2 sensors.

Good servicing practice for a 2004 Mark X oxygen sensor includes checking for exhaust leaks ahead of the sensor, ensuring sound engine earths, and keeping the ignition system and PCV in shape. Sensors aren’t designed to be cleaned with chemicals—replacement is the fix. After fitting, clear codes and allow the ECU to relearn trims with a decent drive cycle. If trims stay off, look for vacuum leaks, MAF issues, or injector problems before blaming a new sensor.

  • Use the correct O2/A‑F sensor socket, don’t twist the loom.
  • Pre‑soak threads, most new sensors come with anti‑seize on the threads—don’t add extra if pre‑coated.
  • Tighten to spec to avoid exhaust leaks, then verify live data shows quick switching (rear) and stable, responsive AFR (front).

Done right, fresh sensors restore crisp throttle response, better economy, and keep the rego or WOF checks hassle‑free across Australia and New Zealand.

Popular questions about 2004 Toyota Mark X oxygen sensors

How many oxygen sensors does a 2004 Mark X have?

The 2004 Mark X V6 uses four sensors in total: two front air–fuel ratio sensors (one on each bank, before the catalytic converters) and two rear heated oxygen sensors (one on each bank, after the cats).

This layout lets the ECU trim fuel accurately per bank and verify each catalyst is doing its job.

What are common signs and fault codes of a failing sensor?

Expect a check‑engine light, poorer fuel economy, hesitant throttle, or a sulphur/rotten‑egg smell. Live data may show slow sensor response or fuel trims pegged rich/lean.

Typical codes include P0135/P0155 (heater), P0136/P0156 (signal), and P0420/P0430 (catalyst efficiency), which can also point to exhaust leaks or ageing cats.

Is it safe to keep driving with a bad oxygen sensor?

It will usually run, but fuel use climbs, emissions rise, and long drives can overheat or damage the catalytic converters, which are far pricier than sensors.

Best bet is to diagnose promptly, fix any exhaust leaks, and replace the suspect sensor with the correct A/F or O2 unit for the affected bank.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "How many oxygen sensors does a 2004 Mark X have?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "The 2004 Mark X V6 uses four sensors in total: two front air–fuel ratio sensors (one on each bank, before the catalytic converters) and two rear heated oxygen sensors (one on each bank, after the cats). This layout lets the ECU trim fuel accurately per bank and verify each catalyst is doing its job." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "What are common signs and fault codes of a failing sensor?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "Expect a check‑engine light, poorer fuel economy, hesitant throttle, or a sulphur/rotten‑egg smell. Live data may show slow sensor response or fuel trims pegged rich/lean. Typical codes include P0135/P0155 (heater), P0136/P0156 (signal), and P0420/P0430 (catalyst efficiency), which can also point to exhaust leaks or ageing cats." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Is it safe to keep driving with a bad oxygen sensor?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "It will usually run, but fuel use climbs, emissions rise, and long drives can overheat or damage the catalytic converters, which are far pricier than sensors. Best bet is to diagnose promptly, fix any exhaust leaks, and replace the suspect sensor with the correct A/F or O2 unit for the affected bank." } } ]}