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Parts for your 2005 Toyota Hiace-Temperature sensors
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2005 Toyota Hiace Temperature Sensors — What They Do and How to Look After Them
Temperature sensors are absolutely fitted to the 2005 Toyota Hiace. Toyota’s workshop manuals and wiring diagrams for the H200-series Hiace (2004–on) detail multiple sensors, including the Engine Coolant Temperature (ECT) sensor, Intake Air Temperature (IAT) sensor (often integrated with the MAF on petrol engines or the MAP on diesels), ambient air temperature for the HVAC, and an evaporator thermistor for the air-con. Diesel variants (2KD-FTV/1KD-FTV) also reference fuel and coolant temperature inputs for glow control and injection strategy. These sources, along with common aftermarket workshop manuals used in Australia and New Zealand, confirm the Hiace relies on temperature data for engine management and comfort systems.
On any 2005 Hiace, temperature sensors let the ECU trim fuel and ignition (petrol) or injection timing and glow plug operation (diesel), run the radiator fans, manage cold-start enrichment, and feed the dash gauge. HVAC sensors help the air-con cycle properly and maintain stable cabin temps. When they drift or fail, the van can be hard to start cold, use more fuel, run rich or lean, or cycle the fans and air-con strangely.
- Common clues a sensor’s unhappy: rough cold starts, high idle, black smoke on diesels, poor economy, erratic temp gauge, fans running all the time, air-con cutting in and out, and OBD-II codes like P0115–P0119 (ECT) or P0110–P0114 (IAT).
- Basic service checks: verify live data with a scan tool (ECT should rise smoothly from ambient to operating temp), compare IAT to actual ambient when cold, and inspect connectors and wiring near the thermostat housing and under the seat base.
There’s no set replacement interval