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Parts for your 2007 Toyota Caldina-Oxygen sensor
Penrite Enviro+ GF-S 5W-30 Engine Oil 5L - EPLUSGF5005
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Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 0W-20 Engine Oil 5L - EPLUS0W20005
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Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 10W-40 Engine Oil 6L - VANSEMI10W40006
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Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 5W-30 Engine Oil 6L - VANSEMI5W30006
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
Penrite Vantage Premium Mineral 15W-40 Engine Oil 6L - VANMIN15W40006
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Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 5W-20 Engine Oil 5L - EPLUS5W20005
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Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 10W-40 Engine Oil 4L - VANSEMI10W40004
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Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 15W-40 Engine Oil 6L - VANSEMI15W40006
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 0W-20 Engine Oil 1L - EPLUS0W20001
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 5W-20 Engine Oil 1L - EPLUS5W20001
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 10W-40 Engine Oil 20L - VANSEMI10W40020
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Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 15W-40 Engine Oil 1L - VANSEMI15W40001
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 5W-30 Engine Oil 1L - VANSEMI5W30001
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 0W-20 Engine Oil 20L - EPLUS0W20020
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Vantage Semi Synthetic 10W-40 Engine Oil 1L - VANSEMI10W40001
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 5W-20 Engine Oil 20L - EPLUS5W20020
Fitment Notes:
Penrite Enviro+ Full Synthetic 5W-20 Engine Oil 10L Enviro Box - EPLUS5W20010BOX
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2007 Toyota Caldina oxygen sensor: what it does and when to replace it
Technical sources confirm the 2007 Toyota Caldina does use oxygen-sensing hardware. In Toyota literature for the T24-series Caldina (2002–2007), the petrol engines are equipped with an upstream air–fuel ratio (A/F) sensor and a downstream oxygen (O2) sensor to control fuel trims and monitor the catalytic converter. This setup is described across Toyota service manuals for the T24# platform, DENSO’s A/F sensor technical guidance, and JOBD/OBD-II emissions requirements applicable to late-2000s Japanese-market vehicles. So yes, an oxygen sensor system is absolutely relevant to the 2007 Caldina.
On this model, the upstream A/F sensor (often called a wideband O2) sits in the exhaust manifold and continuously reads the exhaust’s oxygen content so the ECU can fine-tune fuel delivery. The downstream O2 sensor, mounted after the catalytic converter, checks how well the cat is cleaning up the exhaust. Together they help the Caldina start clean, run smoothly, and meet emissions rules while keeping fuel economy in check.
As part of regular servicing, it’s smart to treat the oxygen sensors as consumable electronics. While Toyota doesn’t always list a fixed replacement interval, real-world experience and supplier guidance suggest A/F sensors can drift with age, heat, and fuel quality. After about 150,000–200,000 km, many owners notice poorer economy, a slightly rough idle, or a check-engine light. If fault codes like P0133, P0136, P0138, P0420, or P2195 pop up, proper diagnosis should include live data checks for sensor response and fuel trims.
- Symptoms of a tired sensor: heavier fuel use, flat spots on acceleration, sulphur smell, blackened tailpipe, or persistent CEL.
- Good practice: inspect wiring and connectors under the bonnet and underbody for heat or road damage, fix exhaust leaks before the sensor, ensure there are no vacuum leaks skewing readings.
- Replacement tips: use quality OEM-equivalent sensors, don’t mix up upstream A/F and downstream O2 types, apply only the factory-specified thread compound (most new sensors come pre-coated), torque to the workshop spec to avoid cracked manifolds or seized threads.
A workshop with a scan tool can confirm sensor health by watching the upstream A/F sensor’s commanded equivalence and the downstream O2’s switching behaviour during a warm idle and steady cruise. If the data’s lazy or out of range, replacing the sensor usually restores the Caldina’s economy and drivability. It’s a quick job with the right socket, and pays back at the bowser.
Popular questions
Where are the oxygen sensors located on a 2007 Toyota Caldina?
The upstream air–fuel ratio sensor is threaded into the exhaust manifold close to the engine for fast light‑off. The downstream oxygen sensor sits after the catalytic converter under the car. Access varies a bit by engine variant, but both are reachable with an O2 sensor socket once the exhaust is cool.
How can someone tell if their Caldina’s oxygen sensor is failing?
Common signs include increased fuel use, a check‑engine light, and a slightly rough idle. A scan tool will often show slow sensor response, abnormal fuel trims, or codes such as P0133 or P0420. If the exhaust has leaks or the engine has vacuum issues, those should be fixed first so the sensor isn’t blamed for another fault.
Is it safe to keep driving with a dodgy O2 sensor?
It’ll usually drive, but fuel economy can nosedive and the catalyst may be put at risk if the mixture runs too rich for long. It’s best to diagnose promptly and replace the sensor if it’s out of spec to protect the cat and keep the Caldina running sweet as.