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Parts for your 2005 Toyota Altezza-Temperature sensors

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JB Weld High Temp Red Silicone 85g - 31314
25%OFF

JB Weld High Temp Red Silicone 85g - 31314

$18.75
$25
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JB Weld Ultimate Grey Silicone 85g - 32327
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JB Weld Ultimate Grey Silicone 85g - 32327

$19.50
$26
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NOCO Genius 6/12V 10A Battery Charger  - GENIUS10AU

NOCO Genius 6/12V 10A Battery Charger - GENIUS10AU

$250
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Permatex Black Silicone Adhesive Sealant 85g - PX81158

Permatex Black Silicone Adhesive Sealant 85g - PX81158

$20
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CTEK Battery Charger 12v 10 Amp 8 Stage - MXS10

CTEK Battery Charger 12v 10 Amp 8 Stage - MXS10

$450
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OEX  Temperature Sensor - CCS39

OEX Temperature Sensor - CCS39

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$103
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VDO Temperature Sensor 1/8 - 27NPT Stud Terminals - 320.093
VDO

VDO Temperature Sensor 1/8 - 27NPT Stud Terminals - 320.093

$75
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NOCO Genius 6v/12v 2A Battery Charger - GENIUS2AU

NOCO Genius 6v/12v 2A Battery Charger - GENIUS2AU

$110
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OEX  Temperature Sensor - CCS43

OEX Temperature Sensor - CCS43

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$59
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OEX  Temperature Sensor - CCS33

OEX Temperature Sensor - CCS33

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$150
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Goss Coolant Temperature Sensor - CS881

Goss Coolant Temperature Sensor - CS881

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$121
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Goss Coolant Temperature Sensor - CS919

Goss Coolant Temperature Sensor - CS919

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$616
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Goss Coolant Temperature Sensor - CS844

Goss Coolant Temperature Sensor - CS844

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$116
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Showing 1 - 39 of 345 products

2005 Toyota Altezza temperature sensors: what they do and how to look after them

Based on Toyota’s factory Repair Manual for the XE10 platform (Altezza/Lexus IS200), Toyota Electrical Wiring Diagrams, and Denso sensor specifications, temperature sensors are absolutely fitted to the 2005 Toyota Altezza and are fundamental to how the car runs. These include the engine coolant temperature (ECT) sensor, intake air temperature (IAT) sensor (typically integrated with the MAF), ambient air temperature sensor for climate control, the automatic transmission fluid temperature sensor (on autos), and the evaporator thermistor in the HVAC.

The ECT sensor tells the ECU how hot the engine is so it can manage fuel enrichment, ignition timing, idle speed, radiator fan operation, and VVT‑i behaviour. The IAT sensor helps the ECU correct for air density to keep fuelling tidy across cold mornings and hot arvos. Ambient and evaporator sensors protect the A/C from icing and help maintain cabin comfort, while the auto’s ATF temp sensor influences shift timing, line pressure, and torque‑converter lock‑up when fitted.

These sensors don’t have a set replacement interval, but they do age. During servicing, a quick health check pays off:

  • Scan live data stone‑cold: ECT and IAT should read close to outside temp under the bonnet, big deviations hint at drift.
  • Check for DTCs like P0115–P0119 (ECT circuit) or P0710–P0713 (ATF temperature, autos).
  • Inspect connectors, earths, and harness routing for heat damage or oil saturation.
  • Clean the MAF/IAT with proper MAF cleaner only, avoid touching the thermistor.
  • Maintain coolant (Toyota SLLC) on schedule, old coolant can corrode the ECT boss and skew readings.

When replacing an ECT sensor, start with a cool engine, relieve system pressure, and drain a little coolant to drop the level. Swap the sensor (use the correct sealing washer or O‑ring as per the Toyota manual), reconnect the plug, then refill and bleed the system to avoid airlocks. Genuine Toyota or Denso equivalents tend to read correctly and last. For autos, the ATF temperature sensor lives in the transmission, replacement generally occurs during internal repair, not as a driveway job.

Tell‑tale symptoms of a crook temperature sensor include hard cold starts, rich running, poor fuel economy, high idle, radiator fans running constantly, lazy shifts on autos, or erratic A/C performance. A quick scan and a couple of basic checks usually pinpoint the culprit without guesswork.

Popular questions

Where are the temperature sensors on a 2005 Toyota Altezza?

The engine coolant temp sensor sits near the thermostat housing or cylinder head. The intake air temp is typically built into the MAF at the airbox inlet. The ambient temp sensor is mounted ahead of the radiator support behind the front bumper. Autos have the ATF temp sensor inside the transmission valve body, and the A/C evaporator sensor is tucked inside the HVAC box behind the dash.

How can an owner tell if the coolant temperature sensor is failing?

Common clues are hard cold starts, over‑rich fuelling, the temp gauge acting oddly, fans running all the time, or codes like P0115–P0119. On a cold engine, the scan tool’s ECT reading should be close to the outside temperature, if it’s way off, the sensor or its wiring likely needs attention.

Does a manual‑trans Altezza have a transmission temperature sensor?

Manual models generally don’t run a dedicated gearbox temperature sensor. The ATF temperature sensor is specific to automatic transmissions, where it informs shift strategy. For manuals, good quality gear oil and routine changes are the main reliability plays.