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Parts for your 2007 Toyota Blade-Map sensor
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2007 Toyota Blade MAP sensor: is it there, what it does, and how to look after it
On the 2007 Toyota Blade, whether a MAP (manifold absolute pressure) sensor is relevant depends on the engine fitted. Technical references used by workshops — Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (Japan market, E15 series) and the Toyota Repair Manual for Auris/Blade E15x engine control systems — show the 2.4‑litre 2AZ‑FE Blade uses a hot‑wire MAF (mass air flow) sensor as the primary load input and does not include a separate MAP sensor in the engine management diagram. By contrast, the 3.5‑litre Blade Master with the 2GR‑FE V6 is listed with a “Vacuum Sensor” on the intake manifold, Toyota’s nomenclature for a MAP sensor, in the 2GR‑FE engine control documentation.
Why no MAP sensor on the 2AZ‑FE Blade? Toyota calibrated that engine around a MAF‑based strategy, using the MAF and throttle angle to derive engine load. With no turbo and stable volumetric efficiency targets, a dedicated manifold pressure input wasn’t required for fuelling or ignition on that variant, which kept the hardware count (and cost) down.
For owners of the Blade Master (2GR‑FE), the car does have a MAP sensor. Its job is to read intake manifold pressure in kilopascals so the ECU can fine‑tune load, altitude compensation, EGR and evaporative system diagnostics, and transient fuelling alongside the MAF. When it goes out of spec, expect rough idle, lazy throttle response, higher fuel use, and fault codes like P0105–P0108.
Servicing advice for the Blade’s MAP sensor (2GR‑FE): it’s a simple, low‑maintenance part, but a quick check during routine servicing pays off. Under the bonnet, the sensor mounts directly to the manifold with an O‑ring. With the ignition on and engine off, a scan tool should read close to local barometric pressure (around 100 kPa at sea level in Aus/NZ). At warm idle, typical readings are roughly 25–40 kPa. Outliers suggest a leak, a blocked port, or a failing sensor.
Replacement is straightforward and usually doesn’t need programming:
- Remove the engine cover, unplug the connector, undo the fixing screw(s), and lift the sensor out.
- Inspect/replace the O‑ring, lightly oil it, and seat the new sensor squarely. Do not overtighten the fastener.
- Reconnect, clear any stored codes, and let the engine idle for a few minutes so the ECU can settle trims.
Avoid blasting the port with harsh solvents or compressed air. If contamination is minor, a light spritz with electronics‑safe cleaner can help, but if the port is oily or the readings are erratic, replacement is the reliable fix. Keeping the intake plumbing sealed and the air filter fresh will keep both the MAF and MAP happy over many kilometres.
FAQs
Does a 2007 Toyota Blade have a MAP sensor?
It depends on the engine. The 2.4‑litre 2AZ‑FE Blade runs a MAF‑only setup and doesn’t use a separate MAP sensor. The 3.5‑litre Blade Master (2GR‑FE) does have a MAP sensor (listed by Toyota as a “Vacuum Sensor”) bolted to the intake manifold. A quick VIN/engine code check or a look under the manifold plenum will confirm which you’ve got.
What are the signs a MAP sensor is failing on a Blade Master?
Common telltales are a shaky idle, flat spots on take‑off, increased fuel consumption, and the MIL on with codes like P0105–P0108. A scan tool reading that’s stuck, implausible, or way off expected kPa at idle/KOEO is another giveaway. Also check for split hoses or manifold leaks that can mimic a crook sensor.
Can a MAP sensor be cleaned, or is replacement better?
Light contamination can sometimes be cleaned with electronics‑safe cleaner, but avoid soaking or poking the sensing port. If readings are unstable, the port is oily, or the fault returns, replacing the sensor and O‑ring is the go. There’s no set replacement interval, a quick inspection each service (10,000–15,000 km) is a sensible habit.