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Parts for your 2017 Toyota Mark x-Temperature sensors

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Freetrack 4G GPS Vehicle Tracker - AVSFT802
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Freetrack 4G GPS Vehicle Tracker - AVSFT802

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Nakamichi Reversing Car Camera - NC-6L

Nakamichi Reversing Car Camera - NC-6L

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Hema Discreet Dual Channel 2K Dash Cam - HM-DVR2

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2017 Toyota Mark X temperature sensors — what they do and how to look after them

Based on technical references including the Toyota Mark X (GRX130 series) Repair Manual (Engine Control – SFI System), Toyota Electronic Parts Catalog, Toyota Electrical Wiring Diagram, and standard OBD‑II documentation for engines 4GR‑FSE and 2GR‑FSE, the 2017 Toyota Mark X absolutely uses multiple temperature sensors. These include the engine coolant temperature (ECT) sensor, intake air temperature (IAT) sensor (commonly integrated in the MAF), ambient and evaporator sensors for the A/C, and a transmission fluid temperature sensor within the automatic transmission’s internal harness. These sources describe both the components and related DTCs (for example, P0115–P0119 for ECT, P0110 for IAT), confirming the Mark X relies on temperature inputs for fuelling, ignition, emissions, cooling fan control, and shift strategy.

For owners and workshops, temperature sensors on a 2017 Toyota Mark X are small parts that make a big difference to how the car runs. They feed live data to the ECU so it can cold‑start cleanly on a frosty Wellington morning, keep the cooling fans honest in a hot Adelaide summer, and trim fuelling for smooth, efficient cruising. If one drifts out of spec, you can see rough idle, pinging, sluggish warm‑up, heavy fuel use, harsh shifts, A/C that won’t behave, or the temp gauge going walkabout.

While these sensors aren’t consumables with a fixed change interval, they do benefit from smart servicing habits:

  • Cooling system care: fresh coolant at the factory interval helps protect the ECT sensor tip from corrosion and scale. After any coolant work, bleed the system properly so the sensor isn’t reading air pockets under the bonnet.
  • Electrical hygiene: inspect connectors and looms near heat sources. A touch of dielectric grease on clean terminals can fend off moisture along NZ’s coastal roads.
  • Air intake cleanliness: if the IAT lives inside the MAF, only use MAF‑safe cleaner. Don’t touch the sensing element with fingers or rags.
  • Fault‑first diagnosis: if the MIL pops on with a temp‑sensor code, verify with live data before swapping parts. Compare cold readings to ambient, then watch how quickly values track as the engine warms.
  • Quality parts and fitment: use correct‑spec replacement sensors with new seals. Tighten to the proper torque, route wiring away from sharp edges, and clear DTCs after repair.

Done right, temperature sensors remain quietly in the background, helping the Mark X’s V6 feel crisp, keep emissions tidy, and avoid overheating dramas on long Kiwi or Aussie road trips.

Popular questions about 2017 Toyota Mark X temperature sensors

Where is the engine coolant temperature (ECT) sensor on a 2017 Mark X?

On the GR‑series V6, the ECT sensor threads into a coolant passage near the thermostat/water outlet housing. It sits up front and slightly to one side under the engine cover, with a two‑pin connector. Access often improves by removing the plastic engine cover and some intake ducting.

How do I know if my ECT sensor is failing?

Common signs include hard cold starts, rich running, the radiator fans stuck on or never engaging, a wandering temp gauge, or a Check Engine light with codes like P0115–P0119. Scan live data from a cold start: the ECT should read close to ambient, then rise smoothly as the engine warms. Erratic jumps or implausible readings point to the sensor, wiring, or a poor ground.

Does the 2017 Mark X have an intake air temperature sensor separate from the MAF?

Most trims use an IAT element integrated into the mass airflow sensor on the airbox. That means cleaning or replacing the MAF addresses IAT issues too. If intake temps read oddly, check for unmetered air leaks after the MAF, a dirty element, or heat‑soak from missing ducting or shields.