Geralt
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Everything posted by Geralt
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Workshop manuals for 1st Gen (holy Grail?)
Geralt replied to Chris.ac's topic in Toyota Alphard Technical Guides
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Workshop manuals for 1st Gen (holy Grail?)
Geralt replied to Chris.ac's topic in Toyota Alphard Technical Guides
Hey @Chris.ac, I followed your example above but Chrome refuses to translate. Not sure what I'm doing wrong. Do you have any suggestions please? -
You probably have the right sensor but to make absolutely sure, disconnect the other sensor. You should get additional P-Code(s), possibly P0141, if you have identified the correct sensor. The P-code is saying the heater circuit is faulty so that potentially includes a high resistance anywhere from ECM circuit board or relay through the connectors and harness. Have you checked all the fuses? Check any harness connections all the way to the ECM connector. Examine for corrosion on the connector pins, clean with contact cleaner if looking dodgy. The resistance of the heater circuit should be less than 10 ohms or thereabouts, if it's much higher then there's a broken cable somewhere. Once you've checked all those then the only likely candidate is the ECM. I can see some on ebay but it is possibly complicated by immboliser codes and such so may not be plug and play. Maybe someone has replaced theirs on this forum.
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The URL is misleading. If you search for "Alphard Lambda" and click on the following... ...it takes you to the 2.4L part. We can infer then that the 2.4L lambda sensor (there's only one) is the same part number as the 3.0L rear sensor....or they might have made a mistake. Either way I think you need to check with them if you need front or rear.
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I guess it could be either of these two: https://www.autojapspares.co.uk/toyota-alphard-mnh10-15-30-v6-petrol-2002-08-lambda-oxygen-02-sensor?search=alphard lambda&category_id=0 https://www.autojapspares.co.uk/toyota-alphard-anh10-24-petrol-2002-08-rear-lambda-oxygen-02-sensor?search=alphard lambda&category_id=0 I guess front and rear translate to Bank 1 or 2. In principle there should not be any difference between bank 1 and 2 so the difference could be harness length or the connectors might be different for poka-yoke. Maybe give them a call with the P-Code and they could advise which one to buy?
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It's screwed into the exhaust, one of two, upstream of the cat converter. Should just require a spanner I imagine. But before you buy another sensor, clear the code and swap bank 1 with 2. Ensure the diagnosis moves to bank 2. If it doesn't it could be your ECM at fault. Note it may require two drive cycles to diagnose. I'm assuming that both sensor heaters use the same fuse.
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I have found Audio Tech Direct very helpful. Tell them what you have and what you want and they will advise. sales@audiotechdirect.com https://audiotechdirect.com/ If you can do basic auto electrics, it's doable.
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faulty oxygen sensor advise please
Geralt replied to shawn's topic in Toyota Alphard Club Forum (2002 - 2008)
The effect of oxygen sensor *upstream of the cat converter is that the control the air-fuel ratio (lambda) becomes crude (open loop control). Emissions will exceed legal levels and ultimately you won't get an MOT. I think what you're asking is whether this will cause engine damage. You should be fine driving to a garage or car parts store and so on. Note there's two oxygen sensors: One upstream and one downstream of the cat converter. Be sure which one is faulty from the OBD P-CODE. -
Totally agree. The driver moves the pedal to achieve a particular vehicle speed. This is turned into a torque demand calculation. Any engine ECU in the last 20 odd years modifies the injection time (among other parameters) to meet the torque output required for the demanded speed. In the case of a lower energy density fuel (e.g. E10) the injection time per stroke will simply be increased to achieve the same torque as a higher energy density fuel, all other things being equal. For the average driver, performance should be no different but it will consume more fuel per stroke and thus lower MPG. Rubber risk notwithstanding (if it even exists on these engines), the key metric when financially comparing the two fuels is pence per mile not MPG. Each individual can only calculate that for themselves.
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Yep. Around 30 per year in the UK according to the Met Office. Granted they're not the monsters seen in the US!
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Juddering on acceleration 3.0
Geralt replied to Alphy51's topic in Toyota Alphard Club Forum (2002 - 2008)
Buy a JOBD tester and it should tell you which cylinder(s) has a misfire. I don't know if the V6 has stick coils or not but consider replacing the coil and plug on the identified cylinder. The ANCEL JP700 tester works on my 2003 2.4L. -
HIDDEN DVD PLAYER
Geralt replied to Nigel Heyward's topic in Toyota Alphard Club Forum (2002 - 2008)
Yes, I have the same but I took out the Toyota HU for some something in English but it doesn't connect to the old DVD box under the pass seat. The DVD player is just dead weight and waiting for me to remove it. -
I think your speedo will over-read and the ABS calibration won't be optimal.
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Looks like position 25, passenger side fuses.
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On the assumption that's it's fallen to the floor, you could try to pull out the carpet from underneath the console. This might leave you a gap to fish it out.
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Many thanks!
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How do I get hold of this Ben Hau chap to do a radio replacement please?
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So there's absolutely no electrical power to anything at all or you just mean the engine won't crank? If the former and if the battery is not flat then there must be a bunch of other fuses gone. The major fuses in my 2003 are in the engine compartment so I would check those first.