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Parts for your 2012 Toyota Land cruiser-Temperature sensors

2012 Toyota Land Cruiser Temperature Sensors

Based on Toyota’s factory Repair Manual for the 200 Series, the Electrical Wiring Diagram (EWD), and dealer diagnostics via Techstream/GSIC, the 2012 Toyota Land Cruiser absolutely uses multiple temperature sensors. These include the engine coolant temperature sensor, intake air temperature sensor, ambient air temperature sensor, transmission fluid temperature sensor, and HVAC-related sensors. They’re essential inputs for the ECU/ECM, transmission control, climate control and the dash gauge.

On a 2012 Land Cruiser (200 Series), temperature sensors help the vehicle run sweet as. The engine coolant temperature (ECT) sensor tells the ECU how hot the donk is so it can adjust fuel, ignition timing and idle speed, and switch the thermo fans as needed. Intake air temperature helps trim fuelling for Aussie and Kiwi conditions, whether it’s a frosty morning or a scorching arvo. The transmission temperature input helps the Aisin six-speed manage shift timing and protect the box during towing. Ambient and cabin-related sensors keep the climate control comfy without the driver fiddling every five minutes.

  • Engine coolant temperature: governs fuelling, timing, fans, and the dash gauge.
  • Intake air temperature: fine-tunes mixture and performance.
  • Transmission fluid temperature: shift strategy and protection when loaded or towing.
  • Ambient/cabin/HVAC sensors: steady cabin temps and demist performance.

As for servicing, temperature sensors are generally “fit and forget” items, but they do rely on good basics. Fresh coolant (changed per the service schedule) prevents corrosion at the ECT sensor and keeps readings stable. Clean, tight electrical connectors under the bonnet are a must—dust, moisture and old clips can make the ECU see the wrong temps. If the Land Cruiser is hard to start cold, runs rich, the fans roar constantly, or the gauge behaves oddly, a scan with Techstream or a quality OBD tool to check live temperature PIDs is the first port of call.

  1. Inspect connectors and wiring looms to the ECT and intake sensors