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Alloy wheel TPMS part number help

Discussion in 'Wheels & Tires' started by KeepOnTruckin, Oct 30, 2023.

  1. Oct 30, 2023 at 8:29 PM
    #1
    KeepOnTruckin

    KeepOnTruckin [OP] New Member

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    Randy
    Vehicle:
    2010 4.6 4x4 Bare Bones
    I bought the 2010 used two years ago. It has V-tec alloy wheels and from the receipt, some aftermarket TPMS sensors which at 4 years old have all died according to install date.

    Any who, I plan on keeping this and it won't get a lot of miles but I don't want to replace these every four years and would prefer an OEM expense and quality over the EZ Sensor 33000 the local tire shop installed.

    The current OEM PN is 42607-0C080 but I'm not sure those fit an alloy wheel. The manual says the following FCC ID/IC ID sensors should be used.
    FCC ID: GQ4-32T
    FCC ID: GQ4-37R
    IC ID: 1470A-13T
    IC ID: 1470A-9R

    Anyone have an OEM part number that will fit these lovely wheels?
    vtec-warlord-394-black-machined-exposed
    https://www.rimslegend.com/v-tec-39...ace---vtec-warlord-394-black-machined-exposed


    20230615_174518.jpg

    Edit:
    Specifically I am looking for sensors that fit those wheels. They currently have a rubber stem vs a bolt in retainer. I'd prefer Toyota if they'll even fit afm wheel like that.

    Thanks
     
    Last edited: Oct 31, 2023
  2. Oct 31, 2023 at 8:11 AM
    #2
    10LimitedWI

    10LimitedWI New Member

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    Just go with whatever the shop has, OEM sensors or not, they all die depending on the batteries in them. OEM is not better in this case.
     
  3. Oct 31, 2023 at 8:18 AM
    #3
    Tundra234

    Tundra234 New Member

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    Florida
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    2020 Tundra DC SR5 Barcelona
    Alot of them
    https://www.sparksparts.com/v-2010-.../electrical--tire-pressure-monitor-components
     
  4. Oct 31, 2023 at 12:30 PM
    #4
    KeepOnTruckin

    KeepOnTruckin [OP] New Member

    Joined:
    Feb 3, 2023
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    289
    Gender:
    Male
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    Randy
    Vehicle:
    2010 4.6 4x4 Bare Bones
    These EZ things started at 3.5 years. A far cry from Toyota's lasting 11 years. So, I have to disagree as the labor X2 outweighs the sensor cost.

    Specifically I am looking for sensors that fit those wheels. They currently have a rubber stem vs a bolt in retainer.
     

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