Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2013 Toyota Crown-Map sensor

Sort by
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP223GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP223GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$541
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP124

Goss MAP Sensor - MP124

Confirm Vehicle
$605
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP138GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP138GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$636
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP171

Goss MAP Sensor - MP171

Confirm Vehicle
$437
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP198

Goss MAP Sensor - MP198

Confirm Vehicle
$270
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP238GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP238GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,800
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP235GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP235GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,773
Fitment Notes:
See More

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP230GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP230GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,237
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP241GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP241GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$855
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP237GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP237GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,358
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP198GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP198GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$862
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP164GEN

Genuine OEM MAP Sensor - MP164GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$1,098
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP178GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP178GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$889
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP123

Goss MAP Sensor - MP123

Confirm Vehicle
$521
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP230

Goss MAP Sensor - MP230

Confirm Vehicle
$559
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP177GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP177GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$430
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP128GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP128GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$466
Fitment Notes:
See More
Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP243GEN

Genuine OEM Map Sensor - MP243GEN

Confirm Vehicle
$409
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP139

Goss MAP Sensor - MP139

Confirm Vehicle
$497
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP128

Goss MAP Sensor - MP128

Confirm Vehicle
$353
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP207

Goss MAP Sensor - MP207

Confirm Vehicle
$371
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP203

Goss MAP Sensor - MP203

Confirm Vehicle
$257
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP238

Goss MAP Sensor - MP238

Confirm Vehicle
$220
Fitment Notes:
See More
Fuelmiser MAP Sensor - CMS255

Fuelmiser MAP Sensor - CMS255

Confirm Vehicle
$195
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP239

Goss MAP Sensor - MP239

Confirm Vehicle
$164
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss MAP Sensor - MP175

Goss MAP Sensor - MP175

Confirm Vehicle
$151
Fitment Notes:
See More
Goss Map Sensor - MP284

Goss Map Sensor - MP284

$657
Fitment Notes:
See More
Showing 118 - 144 of 144 products

2013 Toyota Crown MAP sensor — what it does and when to service it

Based on Toyota’s S210-series Crown repair information (Engine/Hybrid Control sections), the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for the 2012–2018 Crown (S210), and Denso MAP/vacuum sensor service data used on GR- and AR-series engines, the 2013 Toyota Crown is fitted with a manifold absolute pressure (MAP) sensor. It appears across the common Crown engines of the period — 4GR-FSE (2.5 V6), 2GR-FSE (3.5 V6), and the hybrid 2AR-FSE/2AR-FXE — sometimes also referred to by Toyota as a “vacuum sensor”.

The MAP sensor is a small, clever unit that reads the pressure inside the intake manifold. The engine control module blends that reading with inputs from the mass air flow (MAF) sensor, throttle position, and the O2 sensors to sort out fuelling, ignition timing, and EGR flow. On naturally aspirated Crowns, it’s less about boost and more about getting crisp throttle response, tidy idle, solid fuel economy, and low emissions — exactly what Crown owners expect.

As part of routine servicing, a healthy MAP sensor helps the V6 or hybrid four run sweet-as. Over time, vapour and fine oil mist can leave deposits on the sensor port. That grime dulls the pressure signal, nudging fuel trims off and inviting rough idle, hesitation, or an engine light. A quick visual check at service time is worthwhile.

Recommended care looks like this:

  • Inspection: At 20,000–30,000 km service intervals, confirm the MAP connector is snug and the harness isn’t chafed. Look for oil contamination at the sensor port.
  • Cleaning: If light deposits are present, remove the sensor and use an electronics-safe, residue-free cleaner. Don’t poke the sensing element and don’t use aggressive solvents.
  • Testing: If there are drivability niggles or a P0106–P0108 style code, compare live data (kPa) to expected barometric pressure KOEO and to a hand vacuum pump if available.
  • Replacement: If readings are erratic, out of range, or slow to respond, fit a quality replacement. Use a new O-ring, seat it squarely, and avoid overtightening into the plastic manifold.

Typical warning signs owners notice include hunting idle, sluggish take-off, higher-than-usual fuel use, or a check engine light. Because Toyota’s strategy uses both MAF and MAP, faults can be subtle, so data checks beat guesswork. Done right, MAP sensor attention is quick, inexpensive, and keeps a 2013 Crown running like it should — smooth, efficient, and unfussed.

Popular questions about the 2013 Toyota Crown MAP sensor

Where is the MAP sensor on a 2013 Toyota Crown?

On S210 Crowns it’s mounted on or near the upper intake manifold, typically held by one or two screws with a small electrical connector. On V6 models it sits toward the plenum, on the 2AR hybrid it’s on the manifold runner area for a clean pressure signal.

Look for a compact black sensor with a single port into the manifold and a three-pin plug — easy to spot once the engine cover is off.

What symptoms point to a failing MAP sensor on a Crown?

Common giveaways are rough idle, flat spots on light throttle, higher fuel use, and a check engine light with P0106–P0108 codes. Fuel trims may drift positive from under-reading, and cold starts can feel a touch lumpy.

Because the ECU also uses the MAF, some faults are mild — scan tool data and a quick vacuum test help confirm it.

Can the MAP sensor be cleaned or should it be replaced?

Light contamination can often be cleaned with electronics-safe spray. If readings remain jumpy or out of spec, replacement is the go. Always refit with a good O-ring and avoid over-torqueing into the plastic manifold.

If the connector pins are green or the housing is cracked, replacement is the smarter long-term fix.