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Parts for your 2007 Toyota Crown-Oxygen sensor

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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA642-EE17
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA642-EE17

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$228
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX717

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX717

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$220
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX602

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX602

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$210
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA668-EE44
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA668-EE44

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$217
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX729

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX729

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$217
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA739-EE45
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA739-EE45

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$195
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE15
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE15

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$189
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA751-EE15
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA751-EE15

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$205
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE11
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA683-EE11

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$195
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA510-AU9
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA510-AU9

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$197
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Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS114

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS114

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$172
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Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX597

Goss Oxygen Sensor - OX597

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$162
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - AFR722-EE21
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - AFR722-EE21

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$579
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA686-EE6
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA686-EE6

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$317
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Goss oxygen sensor vw/skoda - OX931

Goss oxygen sensor vw/skoda - OX931

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$350
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA341-F26
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA341-F26

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$519
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA821-EE1
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA821-EE1

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$391
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA426-M12
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA426-M12

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$502
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA873-EE3
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA873-EE3

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$436
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA816-EE14
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA816-EE14

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$397
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA811-EE18
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA811-EE18

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$349
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NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA528-C6
NTK

NTK Oxygen Sensor - OZA528-C6

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$328
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Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS130

Tridon Oxygen Sensor Direct Fit - TOS130

$368
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Showing 664 - 686 of 686 products

2007 Toyota Crown oxygen sensor: what it does, why it matters, and how to look after it

Yes, the 2007 Toyota Crown absolutely uses oxygen sensing, and it relies on both upstream air–fuel ratio (A/F, wideband) sensors and downstream oxygen (O2, narrowband) sensors. Toyota’s service information (TIS) for the S180/S200 Crown series, along with the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue and Denso OE listings for the 2GR-FSE, 3GR-FSE/FE, and related petrol engines, all specify Bank 1/2 Sensor 1 A/F sensors and Bank 1/2 Sensor 2 O2 sensors. These are core to closed-loop fuelling and emissions compliance on J-OBD/OBD systems.

On a 2007 Toyota Crown, the oxygen sensor family is the quiet achiever. The upstream A/F sensors constantly measure how rich or lean the exhaust gases are right out of the cylinder banks, letting the ECU trim fuel in real time to hit that sweet stoichiometric target. Downstream O2 sensors sit after the catalytic converters, watching cat efficiency and keeping emissions in check. Together they help the Crown run smoothly, save fuel, and keep the dash free of annoying warning lights.

While they’re not a typical “service item” like oil or filters, these sensors age. By 160,000–200,000 kilometres, response can slow, heaters can fail, and mixtures can drift. That shows up as average fuel economy creeping up, a lazier throttle feel, or a check engine light with codes like P0138, P0139, P0157, P0420/P0430. Left alone, a weak sensor can nudge the cat into an early retirement.

Good servicing for a Crown includes a quick health check of the oxygen sensors’ data. A scan tool can confirm the A/F sensors are trimming nicely and the downstream sensors are steady behind healthy cats. If there are exhaust leaks upstream, fix those first—fresh air sneaking in will trick the sensors. Avoid silicone sealants anywhere the exhaust can sniff them, and never try to “clean” a sensor, if it’s tired, replace it.

When replacement is due, stick with quality OE-equivalent (Denso) sensors matched to the exact engine and bank. Soak the threads with penetrating oil, use the proper O2 socket, and torque to spec—most Denso sensors arrive with the correct thread compound pre-applied, so no extra anti-seize. After fitting, clear trims and codes, then take a gentle drive so the ECU can relearn. The payoff is crisper running, better economy, and a happier cat—too easy.

  • Tell-tales to watch: higher fuel use, sulpherous exhaust smell, uneven idle, or MIL on.
  • Best practice: check live data and fuel trims during routine services, especially past 120,000 km.
  • Pro tip: address any misfires or intake/exhaust leaks before blaming the sensor.

Popular questions about the 2007 Toyota Crown oxygen sensor

How often should the oxygen and A/F sensors be replaced on a 2007 Crown?

They’re not on a fixed schedule, but many workshops see reliable life up to about 160,000–200,000 kilometres for upstream A/F sensors, with downstream O2 sensors often lasting similar or a touch longer. Age, fuel quality, and short-trip driving all influence lifespan.

If fuel economy worsens, trims look odd on a scan tool, or you see related fault codes, testing beats guessing. When replacement is needed, fit OE-equivalent sensors in pairs per bank for consistent readings.

What are the symptoms of a failing oxygen sensor on this model?

Common signs include higher fuel consumption, a slightly rough idle, sluggish response, a sulphur or “eggy” exhaust smell, and a check engine light with codes like P0138/P0139 (slow response), P0420/P0430 (catalyst efficiency), or heater circuit faults.

Always rule out basics first: vacuum or exhaust leaks, tired plugs or coils, and dirty MAF sensors can mimic sensor issues. A quick live-data check of trims and sensor switching speeds is gold.

Is it safe to drive with a bad oxygen sensor?

Short term, the Crown will generally run, but it may default to richer mixtures, costing fuel and risking catalytic converter damage if left too long. Performance can feel a bit doughy, and emissions will climb.

If the MIL is flashing or there are misfire symptoms, park it and sort the fault to protect the cat. Otherwise, book a prompt diagnosis and replacement to avoid bigger bills down the track.