P0110 - Intake Air Temperature Circuit Malfunction
P0110 means the intake air temperature circuit is malfunctioning. It is not automatically just a bad IAT sensor; an unplugged sensor, damaged wiring, connector corrosion, an open or shorted circuit, failed sensor, or integrated MAF/IAT assembly issue can set the same code.
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Check intake boots, PCV hoses, and post-MAF leak paths.
Inspect MAF contamination and airflow data after intake leaks are considered.
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Code Overview
P0110 means the intake air temperature circuit is malfunctioning. It is not automatically just a bad IAT sensor; an unplugged sensor, damaged wiring, connector corrosion, an open or shorted circuit, failed sensor, or integrated MAF/IAT assembly issue can set the same code.
Common Causes
- Toyota Camry: stuck-open thermostats, coolant temperature sensor drift, and low coolant are common temperature-code starting points.
- Ford F-150: thermostat failures, coolant temperature connector corrosion, and harness issues are frequent P0128/P0110-adjacent causes.
- Chevy Silverado: coolant level issues, thermostat wear, connector problems, and sensor data drift often trigger temperature-related codes.
- Honda Accord: aging thermostats, ECT sensor issues, IAT connector faults, and intake-temperature circuit problems are common.
Symptoms
- Check engine light
- Hard starting in some conditions
- Rich or lean fuel behavior in some cases
- Hesitation or drivability issues on some vehicles
- Poor fuel economy
Diagnostic Steps
- If the engine takes too long to reach operating temperature, verify warm-up data because the thermostat is likely stuck open.
- If cabin heat is weak at idle, inspect coolant level, coolant flow, air pockets, and thermostat behavior before replacing sensors.
- If the temperature gauge is inconsistent, compare ECT sensor readings to ambient temperature, infrared readings, and scan data before replacing parts.
- If P0128 returns after thermostat replacement, inspect coolant level, ECT sensor accuracy, connector condition, and thermostat housing sealing.
- If P0110 appears with cold-start drivability issues, inspect intake air temperature sensor wiring, connector fit, and signal voltage before replacing components.
- If IAT or ECT data is implausible on a cold engine, diagnose the circuit and connector before assuming the sensor is the only fault.
Diagnostic Insight
P0110 should be diagnosed as an intake-temperature signal circuit problem, with scan data, connector checks, and voltage behavior leading the repair path.
- Cold-start drivability issues with P0110 should move IAT signal voltage, connector fit, and wiring integrity ahead of parts replacement.
- The IAT reading should be compared with ambient temperature on a cold engine before deciding whether the signal is biased.
- Connector corrosion, loose terminals, wiring damage, opens, or shorts can mimic a failed sensor.
- On vehicles with an integrated MAF/IAT assembly, confirming the sensor location changes whether the repair is a sensor, connector, harness, or MAF assembly path.
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Next Steps
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