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Parts for your 2016 Toyota Wish-Temperature sensors
Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 305mm - 001158
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 300mm PAIR - 001077
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 435mm - 001143
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 85mm PAIR - 001095
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 795mm - 001202
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 420mm - 001175
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 300mm PAIR - 001094
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 800mm - 001104
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 95mm PAIR - 001043
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 765mm - 001203
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 130mm PAIR - 001093
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 460mm PAIR - 001026
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 310mm - 001020
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 910mm - 001113
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 1004mm - 001116
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 698mm - 001110
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 90mm PAIR - 001002
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 960mm - 001114
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 390mm - 001166
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 120mm PAIR - 001133
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 400mm - 001174
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 310mm PAIR - 001082
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Remsa Brake Wear Sensor Length: 270mm PAIR - 001060
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2016 Toyota Wish temperature sensors — what they do and how to look after them
Based on Toyota’s service literature for the ZGE20/25-series Wish (2016) — including the Repair Manual (Engine Control: SFI, Cooling, and Air Induction chapters), the New Car Features guide for the 2ZR-FAE/3ZR-FAE, and the Electrical Wiring Diagram — temperature sensors are absolutely fitted and highly relevant on this model. They include the engine coolant temperature (ECT) sensor, intake air temperature (IAT) sensor (often integrated with the MAF), ambient air and HVAC thermistors, and a transmission/CVT fluid temperature sensor. Denso/Toyota documentation details these as critical inputs for fuelling, ignition, fan control, emissions, and A/C performance.
On a 2016 Toyota Wish, temperature sensors are the quiet achievers that keep everything tidy under the bonnet. The ECT sensor tells the ECU how hot the engine is, shaping warm-up fuelling, ignition timing, fan operation, and even thermostat diagnostics. The IAT sensor lets the ECU know how dense the incoming air is so it can trim fuel precisely. The ambient and evaporator sensors help the climate control avoid foggy windows and icy evaporators, while the CVT/ATF temperature sensor protects the transmission by adjusting line pressure and shift logic when things get toasty.
There’s no routine replacement interval for these sensors, they’re designed to last. Still, during regular servicing it pays to:
- Scan live data from cold start: ECT and IAT should match ambient and rise smoothly. At operating temp, ECT typically sits around 85–95°C in normal driving.
- Inspect connectors and looms for brittle clips, corrosion, or oil/coolant wicking.
- Keep the cooling system healthy with the correct Toyota Super Long Life Coolant and proper bleed — air pockets can cause dodgy ECT readings.
- Check for DTCs like P0115–P0119 (ECT), P0110–P0114 (IAT), P0711 (ATF temp), or HVAC B14xx codes.
Common clues a sensor’s on the fritz include hard cold starts, high idle after warm-up, poor fuel economy, the radiator fans hammering away on a cold engine, or an A/C that cycles oddly. If replacement’s needed, choose genuine or high-quality OE-equivalent parts — the thermistor curve matters. For an ECT, expect minimal coolant loss if you’re quick, but always top up and bleed correctly. Avoid using thread sealants unless specified, most sensors rely on a sealing washer or taper and need only moderate tightening.
For the IAT (in the MAF), don’t clean with harsh solvents that can damage the film and thermistor. If the CVT fluid temp sensor flags a fault, plan on proper CVT service procedures and correct Toyota CVT fluid — temperature logic is central to CVT life.
- Where are the temperature sensors on a 2016 Toyota Wish?
The ECT sensor sits on the engine (typically near the thermostat housing or cylinder head water outlet). The IAT is built into the MAF on the air intake duct or airbox. The ambient temperature sensor mounts behind the front bumper, and the evaporator sensor is within the HVAC case. The CVT/ATF temperature sensor is internal to the transmission valve body and read via the transmission ECU.
- How can someone tell if the coolant temperature sensor is failing?
Using a scan tool, the ECT should show ambient temperature on a cold start and climb smoothly. Odd behaviour like radiator fans running from cold, rich fuel smells, rough cold starts, or a temperature gauge that’s erratic points to trouble. Fault codes P0115–P0119 are common, and comparing ECT to an infrared thermometer on the thermostat housing is a handy cross-check.
- Do temperature sensors need routine replacement, and what might it cost?
They’re not a scheduled replacement item, replace only if faulty or out-of-range. Labour for an ECT sensor is usually modest, with a small coolant top-up, parts cost varies depending on genuine vs OE-equivalent. MAF/IAT assemblies cost more. Transmission temp sensor issues often involve internal work or valve body service, so get a specialist to diagnose before ordering parts.