The intake air temperature (IAT) sensor is a thermistor which measures the temperature of the air entering the engine. The PCM applies 5 volts through a pull-up resistor to the IAT sensor. When the intake air is cold, the sensor resistance is high and the PCM will monitor a high signal voltage on the IAT signal circuit. If the intake air is warm, the sensor resistance is lower causing the PCM to monitor a lower voltage. DTC P0112 will set when the PCM detects an excessively low signal voltage on the intake air temperature sensor signal circuit.
• | No active ECT sensor, MAF sensor, or VSS DTCs are present. |
• | The engine has been running for more than 10 seconds. |
• | The vehicle speed is more than 25 mph. |
• | The IAT signal voltage indicates an intake air temperature more than 134°C (274°F). |
• | The above conditions are present for at least 20 seconds. |
• | The PCM will illuminate the MIL during the second consecutive trip in which the diagnostic test has been run and failed. |
• | The PCM will store conditions which were present when the DTC set as Freeze Frame and Fail Records data. |
• | The PCM will turn the MIL OFF during the third consecutive trip in which the diagnostic has been run and passed. |
• | The history DTC will clear after 40 consecutive warm-up cycles have occurred without a malfunction. |
• | The DTC can be cleared by using the scan tool Clear Info function or by disconnecting the PCM battery feed. |
Check for the following conditions:
• | A poor connection at the PCM |
Inspect the harness connectors for backed-out terminals, improper mating, broken locks, improperly formed or damaged terminals, and poor terminal-to-wire connections. Use a corresponding mating terminal to check for proper terminal tension. |
• | Damaged harness--If the harness appears to be OK, observe the display on the scan tool while moving connectors and wiring harnesses related to the sensor. A change in the display will indicate the location of the malfunction. Refer to Wiring Repairs . |
• | A skewed or mis-scaled IAT sensor--Refer to Temperature Versus Resistance . |
If DTC P0112 cannot be duplicated, the information included in the Fail Records data can be useful in determining vehicle mileage since the DTC was last set.
The numbers below refer to the step numbers on the diagnostic table:
This step verifies that the fault is present.
If DTC P0112 can be repeated only by duplicating the Fail Records conditions. Refer to Temperature vs Resistance table. The table may be used to test the IAT sensor at various temperatures in order to evaluate the possibility of a shifted sensor that may be shorted above or below a certain temperature. If this is the case, replace the IAT sensor. If the IAT sensor appears to be OK, the fault is intermittent refer to Diagnostic Aids.
This vehicle is equipped with a PCM which utilizes an Electrically Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory (EEPROM). When the PCM is being replaced, the new PCM must be programmed. Refer to PCM Replacement/Programming.
Step | Action | Value(s) | Yes | No |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Did you perform the Powertrain On Board Diagnostic (OBD) System Check? | -- | ||
Does the scan tool indicate the IAT parameter is more than specified value? | 135°C (275°F) | |||
Does scan tool indicate DTC P0112 failed this ignition? | -- | Go to Diagnostic Aids | ||
4 |
Does the scan tool indicate the IAT parameter is less than the specified value? | -37°C (-34°F) | ||
5 |
Did you find and correct the condition? | -- | ||
6 | Replace the IAT sensor. Refer to Intake Air Temperature Sensor Replacement . Did you complete the replacement? | -- | -- | |
Important: : The replacement PCM must be programmed. Replace the PCM. Refer to Powertrain Control Module Replacement/Programming . Did you complete the replacement? | -- | -- | ||
8 |
Does the DTC reset? | -- | System OK |