OBD-II System Category

Sensor and Circuit OBD Codes

Sensor and circuit codes need electrical checks before replacing parts because wiring, grounds, and connectors are common failures. This category page groups the most useful sensor and circuit guides, symptoms, likely parts, and diagnostic checks.

P0420 catalytic converter and downstream oxygen sensor diagnostic scene
P0420 diagnosis focuses on catalytic converter efficiency, downstream oxygen sensor behavior, exhaust leaks, and engine conditions that can damage the converter.

Common symptoms

  • warning light
  • intermittent drivability issue
  • failed readiness monitor
  • poor throttle response
  • hard starting

Likely causes

  • open circuit
  • short to ground
  • corroded connector
  • failed sensor
  • poor module ground

How Sensor and Circuit Codes Usually Start

Sensor and Circuit codes are best handled as failed tests, not automatic part orders. A scanner shows what the vehicle detected, but the repair still depends on freeze-frame data, live readings, visible condition, and whether any upstream code changed the result. In this category, the first inspection usually covers sensor connector, wiring harness, sensor, then moves to wiring, leaks, pressure, fluid condition, or module commands if the visual checks do not explain the fault.

Use the individual guides such as P0010, P0011, P0012, P0013, P0014, P0016 to move from system-level context into a code-specific diagnosis. Each page has a different title, safety note, cost range, and related-code path, so the category page should be a starting point rather than the final answer.

Vehicle engine bay with service access points
Sensor and Circuit repair context for OBD-II diagnosis.

Data to Save for Sensor and Circuit

  • Stored, pending, and permanent sensor and circuit codes from all available modules.
  • Freeze-frame speed, load, coolant temperature, fuel trim, voltage, and operating state.
  • Recent sensor and circuit repairs, maintenance, battery events, fluid service, fuel fill-ups, or weather changes.
  • Whether symptoms match warning light, intermittent drivability issue, failed readiness monitor or appear only under one driving condition.

Common False Leads

False leads happen when a secondary code is repaired before the cause that created it. With sensor and circuit, inspect open circuit, short to ground, corroded connector, failed sensor before assuming the named sensor or module is bad. A loose connector, intake leak, weak battery, low fluid level, or exhaust leak can make an otherwise good component report impossible values.

When the sensor and circuit estimate is expensive, ask which test proved the failure and whether related codes changed the diagnostic order.

Repair Verification for Sensor and Circuit Codes

Verification should match the original condition. If the code set at highway cruise, a driveway idle test is not enough. If it set cold, a hot restart may not prove anything. After repair, clear the code, repeat the relevant drive condition, and confirm the monitor or live-data value behaves normally. This final step is what separates a completed sensor and circuit repair from a temporary warning-light reset.

For sensor and circuit, document what changed after the repair: code status, pending-code status, live-data reading, monitor status, and whether the original symptom returned. That record matters because a second code in the same system can be a new failure, a missed upstream cause, or a normal monitor that has not completed yet.

Sensor and Circuit Cost Planning

Costs in the sensor and circuit category depend on access and proof. A connector, hose, service item, fluid correction, or visible leak can be modest. A buried harness, converter, transmission, module, or intermittent electrical fault needs more testing and should come with a clearer written explanation.

Best Internal Path

Open the most specific sensor and circuit code page first, then compare the symptom and repair-cost page if available. The category page explains the system, but the code page carries the exact diagnostic sequence and related-code links.

Sensor and Circuit Summary

Use this sensor and circuit category to understand the system, then move into the exact code guide. The strongest repair plan saves scan data, checks likely causes, confirms the failed test, compares cost range, and verifies the repair under the original driving condition.

When a sensor and circuit page feels close but not exact, compare the listed symptoms and the code titles before deciding. The right next page is the one that matches both the scan result and the way the vehicle behaved when the warning light appeared.

If two sensor and circuit guides seem relevant, prioritize the one tied to stored or pending code data. Then use the other page as a comparison for related symptoms, costs, and follow-up checks.

That final sensor and circuit comparison keeps the category useful without turning it into a generic repair guess or a thin list of links.

When the sensor and circuit category still feels broad, move into a specific guide and compare the exact title, symptoms, likely causes, and cost range. A category can explain the system, but the individual page is where the repair path becomes specific enough to test.

Sensor and Circuit Code Guides

P0010 A Camshaft Position Actuator Circuit (Bank 1) P0011 A Camshaft Position Timing Over-Advanced (Bank 1) P0012 A Camshaft Position Timing Over-Retarded (Bank 1) P0013 B Camshaft Position Actuator Circuit (Bank 1) P0014 B Camshaft Position Timing Over-Advanced (Bank 1) P0016 Crankshaft/Camshaft Position Correlation (Bank 1 Sensor A) P0017 Crankshaft/Camshaft Position Correlation (Bank 1 Sensor B) P0020 A Camshaft Position Actuator Circuit (Bank 2) P0021 A Camshaft Position Timing Over-Advanced (Bank 2) P0022 A Camshaft Position Timing Over-Retarded (Bank 2) P0030 HO2S Heater Control Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 1) P0031 HO2S Heater Control Circuit Low (Bank 1 Sensor 1) P0032 HO2S Heater Control Circuit High (Bank 1 Sensor 1) P0036 HO2S Heater Control Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 2) P0040 O2 Sensor Signals Swapped Bank 1 Sensor 1 / Bank 2 Sensor 1 P0050 HO2S Heater Control Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 1) P0073 Ambient Air Temperature Sensor Circuit High P0115 Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor 1 Circuit Malfunction P0116 Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor 1 Circuit Range/Performance Problem P0117 Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor 1 Circuit Low Input P0118 Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor 1 Circuit High Input P0119 Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor 1 Circuit Intermittent P0120 Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor A Circuit Malfunction P0121 Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor A Circuit Range/Performance Problem P0122 Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor A Circuit Low Input P0123 Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor A Circuit High Input P0124 Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor A Circuit Intermittent P0125 Insufficient Coolant Temperature for Closed Loop Fuel Control P0128 Coolant Thermostat Temperature Below Regulating Temperature P0130 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 1) Malfunction P0131 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 1) Low Voltage P0132 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 1) High Voltage P0133 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 1) Slow Response P0134 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 1) No Activity Detected P0135 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 1) Heater Circuit Malfunction P0136 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 2) Malfunction P0137 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 2) Low Voltage P0138 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 2) High Voltage P0139 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 2) Slow Response P0140 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 2) No Activity Detected P0141 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 2) Heater Circuit Malfunction P0142 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 3) Malfunction P0143 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 3) Low Voltage P0144 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 3) High Voltage P0145 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 3) Slow Response P0146 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 3) No Activity Detected P0147 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 1 Sensor 3) Heater Circuit Malfunction P0150 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 1) Malfunction P0151 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 1) Low Voltage P0152 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 1) High Voltage P0153 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 1) Slow Response P0154 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 1) No Activity Detected P0155 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 1) Heater Circuit Malfunction P0156 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 2) Malfunction P0157 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 2) Low Voltage P0158 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 2) High Voltage P0159 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 2) Slow Response P0160 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 2) No Activity Detected P0161 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 2) Heater Circuit Malfunction P0162 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 3) Malfunction P0163 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 3) Low Voltage P0164 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 3) High Voltage P0165 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 3) Slow Response P0166 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 3) No Activity Detected P0167 O2 Sensor Circuit (Bank 2 Sensor 3) Heater Circuit Malfunction P0325 Knock Sensor 1 Circuit (Bank 1) P0327 Knock Sensor 1 Circuit Low Input (Bank 1) P0328 Knock Sensor 1 Circuit High Input (Bank 1) P0330 Knock Sensor 2 Circuit (Bank 2) P0334 Knock Sensor 2 Circuit Intermittent (Bank 2) P0335 Crankshaft Position Sensor A Circuit Malfunction P0336 Crankshaft Position Sensor A Circuit Range/Performance Problem P0337 Crankshaft Position Sensor A Circuit Low Input P0338 Crankshaft Position Sensor A Circuit High Input P0339 Crankshaft Position Sensor A Circuit Intermittent P0340 Camshaft Position Sensor A Bank 1 Circuit Malfunction P0341 Camshaft Position Sensor A Bank 1 Circuit Range/Performance Problem P0342 Camshaft Position Sensor A Bank 1 Circuit Low Input P0343 Camshaft Position Sensor A Bank 1 Circuit High Input P0344 Camshaft Position Sensor A Bank 1 Circuit Intermittent P0500 Vehicle Speed Sensor Malfunction P0550 Power Steering Pressure Sensor Circuit P0551 Power Steering Pressure Sensor Range/Performance P2135 Throttle/Pedal Position Sensor/Switch A/B Voltage Correlation

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How to Use This Sensor and Circuit OBD Codes Page

This Sensor and Circuit OBD Codes page is meant to turn a broad repair question into a specific next action. Read the main answer first, then compare it with the scan report, symptom timing, recent service history, and any related pages linked from this section. If the evidence does not match the page, move to the closest code, symptom, system, make, or repair-cost guide instead of forcing the diagnosis to fit.

For this categories / sensor-and-circuit path, a useful session ends with one clear decision: save more scan data, inspect a visible part, compare a related code, estimate the repair, avoid driving, or schedule professional diagnosis. Keep the first scan report and final verification note together so the repair can be checked later if the warning light returns.