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Automotive Sensors

Shop Automotive Sensors at Micks Gone Bush, organised for auto electricians, diagnostic technicians, workshops, and fault-finding DIY buyers who need reliable automotive sensors without digging through an unfiltered catalogue. This collection has been written and structured around real automotive search behaviour, using known product terms such as car sensors, oxygen sensors, crankshaft position sensors, camshaft position sensors, MAF sensors, MAP sensors, temperature sensors, pressure sensors. The aim is simple: help you find the right part family faster, understand what to check before ordering, and keep the final fitment decision grounded in practical workshop information.

The products in this range sit within the broader Micks Gone Bush automotive parts catalogue and have been grouped so they can work with the existing store navigation, smart collections, and menu structure. Instead of treating each item as an isolated SKU, the collection connects related product types by system, use case, and service task. That makes it easier to compare options, build a repair list, and move from a symptom or job type to a more specific part.

What You Will Find In This Collection

This collection may include oxygen sensors, crankshaft and camshaft position sensors, mass air flow and manifold pressure sensors, temperature and pressure sensors, and wheel speed, throttle position, gauge sender, and related sensor parts. The exact range can change as supplier data, product availability, and catalogue updates change, but the collection is built around the core job of helping buyers find relevant automotive replacement parts with clear category signals.

  • oxygen sensors
  • crankshaft and camshaft position sensors
  • mass air flow and manifold pressure sensors
  • temperature and pressure sensors
  • wheel speed, throttle position, gauge sender, and related sensor parts

Common Applications

These parts are commonly searched for when working on check engine light diagnosis, poor running or hard starting repair, fuel economy and emissions faults, cooling fan or gauge issues, ABS and wheel speed diagnosis, and engine management repairs. Some buyers know the exact SKU they need, while others start from a fault, a worn component, or a service requirement. The page is designed to support both paths.

  • check engine light diagnosis
  • poor running or hard starting repair
  • fuel economy and emissions faults
  • cooling fan or gauge issues
  • ABS and wheel speed diagnosis
  • engine management repairs

How To Choose The Right Part

Good parts selection starts with fitment. Vehicle parts are often split by model year, engine code, chassis, body shape, production date, left or right position, front or rear position, or connector style. Even parts that share a common name can vary across trim levels and build ranges. Before ordering, compare the product title, SKU, manufacturer information, images, and technical notes against the part already fitted to the vehicle.

  • Read diagnostic trouble codes and confirm the failed circuit before replacing a sensor.
  • Match plug shape, wire count, thread size, mounting style, and sensor position.
  • Inspect wiring, grounds, connectors, vacuum leaks, and contamination because those faults can mimic sensor failure.
  • Use quality replacement parts where signal accuracy is critical to engine management.

For SEO and practical navigation, this collection is connected with terms such as car sensors, oxygen sensors, crankshaft position sensors, camshaft position sensors, MAF sensors, MAP sensors, temperature sensors, pressure sensors. Those keywords are not just search phrases; they describe how customers usually think about the job. A mechanic may search by system, a trade buyer may search by brand or SKU, and a vehicle owner may search by the symptom they are trying to solve. The collection description brings those paths together while keeping the content useful rather than stuffed with repeated phrases.

Quality, Fitment, And Workshop Confidence

Micks Gone Bush is building these collections with an emphasis on clarity, fitment awareness, and practical buying confidence. The goal is not to promise that a part fits every vehicle in a broad category. The goal is to make the right product group easy to find, then encourage the checks that experienced parts interpreters and technicians use before fitting. That approach supports better search visibility and better customer outcomes.

EEAT matters in automotive parts because incorrect selection can waste time, cause avoidable returns, or create safety and reliability problems. Experience shows up in how products are grouped by real repair tasks. Expertise shows up in the reminders about measurements, connectors, materials, pressure ratings, and application details. Authoritativeness comes from using clear automotive terminology and supplier-led product data. Trust comes from being direct about fitment checks and installation responsibility.

Before Fitting

Always inspect the surrounding system before replacing a single failed part. Many automotive components fail because another issue has increased load, heat, vibration, contamination, pressure, or resistance. A new part should be fitted into a system that has been checked, cleaned, adjusted, bled, flushed, tightened, or tested as the job requires. For safety-critical systems, use a qualified technician and follow manufacturer service information.

  • This collection is written for buyers who need accurate diagnostic parts, not guesswork.
  • Final fitment should be confirmed with vehicle application data and the original sensor details.

When choosing parts online, the safest process is to identify the system first, narrow by vehicle and application, then compare the product details against the original component. A part may look similar in a photo but differ in a connector, mounting point, pressure rating, material, thread, or operating range. That is why this page uses descriptive categories, product type signals, brand names, and practical buying notes together.

For workshop buyers, a well-organised collection saves time at the counter and in the bay. It helps a technician move from symptom to system, then from system to likely part family. This is useful for scheduled servicing, urgent breakdown work, and repeat maintenance on fleet vehicles where common failure items need to be found quickly.

For owners buying their own parts, it is worth taking a few extra minutes to check the vehicle year, model, engine, body, drivetrain, and any production split. Also compare the original part number where available. If the vehicle has been modified, converted, imported, or repaired previously, visual confirmation becomes even more important.

Quality, fitment, and installation all work together. A correct part fitted poorly can fail early, and a good installation cannot make an incorrect part suitable. Follow manufacturer service information where possible, use the correct tools, and treat safety-critical systems with the care they deserve.

When choosing parts online, the safest process is to identify the system first, narrow by vehicle and application, then compare the product details against the original component. A part may look similar in a photo but differ in a connector, mounting point, pressure rating, material, thread, or operating range. That is why this page uses descriptive categories, product type signals, brand names, and practical buying notes together.

For workshop buyers, a well-organised collection saves time at the counter and in the bay. It helps a technician move from symptom to system, then from system to likely part family. This is useful for scheduled servicing, urgent breakdown work, and repeat maintenance on fleet vehicles where common failure items need to be found quickly.

For owners buying their own parts, it is worth taking a few extra minutes to check the vehicle year, model, engine, body, drivetrain, and any production split. Also compare the original part number where available. If the vehicle has been modified, converted, imported, or repaired previously, visual confirmation becomes even more important.

Quality, fitment, and installation all work together. A correct part fitted poorly can fail early, and a good installation cannot make an incorrect part suitable. Follow manufacturer service information where possible, use the correct tools, and treat safety-critical systems with the care they deserve.

When choosing parts online, the safest process is to identify the system first, narrow by vehicle and application, then compare the product details against the original component. A part may look similar in a photo but differ in a connector, mounting point, pressure rating, material, thread, or operating range. That is why this page uses descriptive categories, product type signals, brand names, and practical buying notes together.

For workshop buyers, a well-organised collection saves time at the counter and in the bay. It helps a technician move from symptom to system, then from system to likely part family. This is useful for scheduled servicing, urgent breakdown work, and repeat maintenance on fleet vehicles where common failure items need to be found quickly.

For owners buying their own parts, it is worth taking a few extra minutes to check the vehicle year, model, engine, body, drivetrain, and any production split. Also compare the original part number where available. If the vehicle has been modified, converted, imported, or repaired previously, visual confirmation becomes even more important.

Quality, fitment, and installation all work together. A correct part fitted poorly can fail early, and a good installation cannot make an incorrect part suitable. Follow manufacturer service information where possible, use the correct tools, and treat safety-critical systems with the care they deserve.

When choosing parts online, the safest process is to identify the system first, narrow by vehicle and application, then compare the product details against the original component. A part may look similar in a photo but differ in a connector, mounting point, pressure rating, material, thread, or operating range. That is why this page uses descriptive categories, product type signals, brand names, and practical buying notes together.

Browse the Automotive Sensors collection to compare relevant automotive sensors, check product details, and build a more confident repair or service order.

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Original price $62.61 - Original price $62.61
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Bosch Premium Automotive Oxygen Lambda Sensor 0258005703

BOSCH
In stock

Bosch Premium Automotive Oxygen Lambda Sensor Fits Holden, Toyota, Chevrolet, Daewoo, Holden Special Vehicles Double laser-welded stainless stee...

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Original price $62.61 - Original price $62.61
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$62.61
$62.61 - $62.61
Current price $62.61
Original price $140.84 - Original price $140.84
Original price
$140.84
$140.84 - $140.84
Current price $140.84

Bosch Oxygen Sensor 0258005088

BOSCH
Low stock

Bosch Oxygen Sensor Fits Mercedes Benz CLK, C-Class Patented SmartLink connector systemNo special tools required for installationSealed protecti...

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Original price $140.84 - Original price $140.84
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$140.84
$140.84 - $140.84
Current price $140.84
Original price $100.49 - Original price $100.49
Original price
$100.49
$100.49 - $100.49
Current price $100.49

Bosch Oxygen Sensor 0258003810

BOSCH
Low stock

Bosch Oxygen Sensor Fits Bmw 3 Series, 5 Series Patented SmartLink connector systemNo special tools required for installationSealed protection t...

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Original price $100.49 - Original price $100.49
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$100.49
$100.49 - $100.49
Current price $100.49
Original price $141.89 - Original price $141.89
Original price
$141.89
$141.89 - $141.89
Current price $141.89

Bosch Direct Fit Oxygen Sensor Suits Porsche 911 4 Wire (258003564) 0258003564

BOSCH
Low stock

Bosch Direct Fit Oxygen Sensor Suits Porsche 911 4 Wire (258003564) Fits Porsche 911 Bosch manufactures and supplies the parts needed to enhance...

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Original price $141.89 - Original price $141.89
Original price
$141.89
$141.89 - $141.89
Current price $141.89

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