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Parts for your 2014 Toyota Wish-Map sensor

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2014 Toyota Wish MAP sensor: what it does and how to look after it

Technical documentation for the 2014 Toyota Wish (ZGE2#, 2ZR‑FAE/3ZR‑FAE) confirms the vehicle uses a Manifold Absolute Pressure sensor. Toyota’s New Car Features for ZR engines describes a MAP/Vacuum Sensor input to the ECM alongside the MAF, the Factory Repair Manual (RM for ZGE2# series) shows MAP data used for load and barometric correction, and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalog lists “Sensor, Manifold Absolute Pressure (Vacuum Sensor)” (e.g., 89421‑0D040/89421‑0D060) for these engines. The MAP sensor is therefore fitted and relevant to servicing.

On the 2014 Toyota Wish, the MAP sensor (Toyota also calls it the Vacuum Sensor) keeps tabs on the pressure inside the intake manifold. Paired with the MAF, it lets the ECM calculate engine load precisely, trim fuel, set ignition timing, and keep Valvematic and VVT behaviour on song across Aussie and Kiwi altitudes. It also gives the ECM a barometric baseline at key‑on and acts as a backup if the MAF goes missing in action.

When this little sensor plays up, drivability tends to go downhill. Expect lazy throttle response, a lumpy idle, increased fuel use, or an engine light with codes like P0106–P0108. Because the Wish runs a mostly open throttle under Valvematic, a dodgy MAP reading can make the mixture rich and soggy.

Servicing is straightforward. During routine maintenance (every 40–60,000 km is a good cadence), inspect the sensor’s 3‑pin connector for corrosion, check the O‑ring for flattening, and make sure the manifold port isn’t choked with dust or oil mist. Cleaning is fine: unplug, remove the single bolt, and mist the tip with MAF‑safe electronics cleaner, avoid poking the port with wire. Let it air‑dry before refitting.

Replacement is a quick driveway job. With the ignition off, relieve residual vacuum, unplug the connector, undo the 10 mm bolt, and lift the sensor out. Fit a fresh O‑ring, seat the new unit squarely, and snug the bolt to factory spec (about 8 N·m is typical for this size). Reconnect, clear codes, and let the ECM relearn with a short mixed drive. Genuine Toyota or quality aftermarket sensors both work, match the part to the VIN, as 2ZR‑FAE and 3ZR‑FAE variants may differ.

A quick health check with a scan tool helps too. At key‑on/engine‑off near sea level the reading should be around 100 kPa, at warm idle it’ll drop into the 25–45 kPa range depending on altitude and load. Any flat‑lined, jumpy, or implausible values point to a sensor fault, wiring issue, or a vacuum leak rather than the sensor itself. Regular checks keep fuel economy tidy and help the Wish cruise happily for many more kilometres.

Where is the MAP sensor on a 2014 Toyota Wish?

It’s mounted on the plastic intake manifold with a single 10 mm bolt and a 3‑pin plug. Under the bonnet, look for a small black sensor body seated into the manifold runner, no need to remove the manifold, just pop off the engine cover for access.

Can a 2014 Toyota Wish run with a faulty or unplugged MAP sensor?

It may start and limp using default values and the MAF, but fuel economy and drivability will suffer, and the MIL will light. It’s not a good idea to drive far like that—sort the sensor, wiring, or any vacuum leaks promptly.

Are 2ZR‑FAE and 3ZR‑FAE MAP sensors the same part?

They’re functionally similar but part numbers can differ by engine and build date (common examples include 89421‑0D040 and 89421‑0D060). The smart move is to match by VIN. When installing, use a fresh O‑ring and tighten the retaining bolt to about 7–9 N·m.