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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Ist-Map sensor
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2006 Toyota ist MAP sensor — is it actually there?
For the 2006 Toyota ist (NCP60/NCP61 with 1NZ‑FE 1.5‑litre or 2NZ‑FE 1.3‑litre engines), a factory‑fitted MAP sensor isn’t used. Toyota’s own technical literature for this platform — the SFI/EFI System description in Toyota New Car Features (NCF) for the NCP60 series and the Toyota Global Techinfo (TIS) service manual set — details a hot‑wire Mass Air Flow (MAF) meter with built‑in Intake Air Temperature sensor as the primary load sensor, plus an atmospheric (barometric) pressure sensor integrated inside the ECM. The Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (JDM EPC) likewise lists the MAF meter (commonly 22204‑0D030 range for 1NZ‑FE) but no manifold absolute pressure sensor under the intake manifold group for the ist.
That’s why parts sites sometimes cause confusion: some Toyota engines run both MAF and MAP, but the 2006 ist’s naturally aspirated 1NZ‑FE/2NZ‑FE in this chassis doesn’t. The ECU calculates engine load from the MAF signal and rpm, and corrects for altitude via the ECM’s internal baro sensor, so there’s no need to measure manifold pressure directly.
- Load sensing is MAF‑based, not speed‑density.
- Altitude correction is handled by the ECM’s internal barometric sensor.
- No turbocharging on the ist, so no boost pressure to monitor.
- JDM EPC and NCF for NCP60/NCP61 list MAF, not MAP, for this model.
If someone’s chasing a “MAP sensor” fault on a 2006 ist, it’s worth double‑checking the code description. DTCs P0101–P0103 point to the MAF meter, P0105–P0108 are generic MAP/Baro codes but on this car they relate to barometric sensing or plausibility, not a stand‑alone manifold sensor. The smarter play for rough idle, poor fuel economy, or stalling is basic air‑meter maintenance and vacuum integrity checks:
- Inspect and clean the MAF with MAF‑safe cleaner (don’t touch the element).
- Check the intake ducting and PCV hoses for splits and loose clamps.
- Clean the throttle body bore and plate, perform idle relearn if required.
- Scan live data: MAF g/s at hot idle, short/long‑term fuel trims, and IAT.
For owners in Australia and New Zealand, any listing calling out a MAP sensor for a 2006 ist is likely a catalogue carry‑over from other Toyota platforms. Stick with OE‑style MAF diagnostics and it’ll be sweet under the bonnet.
Does a 2006 Toyota ist have a MAP sensor from factory?
No — the 2006 ist uses a hot‑wire MAF as its primary load sensor and relies on an internal barometric sensor in the ECU. That setup is documented in Toyota NCF and TIS for the NCP60/NCP61 ist.
Some markets and other Toyota engines do run a MAP, which is why parts sites can be confusing. On the ist, a “MAP fault” often points to baro or MAF plausibility, not a missing manifold sensor.
Where do people usually look when they think the MAP sensor is missing?
They’ll often check the intake manifold and find nothing. The actual air‑meter is the MAF on the airbox/intake tube, and there may be an EVAP purge VSV or similar fittings on the manifold that get mistaken for a MAP.
If there’s wiring spliced to an extra sensor on the manifold, that’s likely aftermarket — not how the 2006 ist left the factory.
What should be serviced instead of a MAP sensor on a 2006 ist?
Give the MAF a careful clean with MAF‑safe spray, inspect the intake snorkel for cracks, refresh the air filter, and clean the throttle body. Check for vacuum leaks and make sure fuel trims are tidy on a scan tool.
Those simple steps usually restore smooth idle and decent fuel economy on this model far better than hunting for a non‑existent MAP sensor.