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P0117: Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor 1 Circuit Low

Severity
warning
NHTSA Reports
3
Vehicles Affected
3
System
Powertrain

What Does P0117 Mean?

P0117 is a diagnostic trouble code indicating: Engine Coolant Temperature Sensor 1 Circuit Low. This code relates to the fuel and air metering system. It has been reported in NHTSA complaints across 3 different vehicle models.

The Engine Coolant Temperature (ECT) sensor is one of the most important sensors on the engine. It's a thermistor that measures coolant temperature, which the ECU uses for: fuel injection amount (cold engines need more fuel), ignition timing, cooling fan activation, transmission shift points, and EGR operation. A faulty ECT sensor can cause a cascade of problems because so many systems depend on accurate coolant temperature data. The sensor is typically threaded into the engine block or thermostat housing near the coolant passage.

The ECT sensor is one of the most important sensors on the engine because so many systems depend on coolant temperature data: fuel injection amount (cold enrichment), ignition timing, cooling fan activation, transmission shift points, EGR operation, and evaporative emissions purge timing. A faulty ECT sensor can cause a cascade of seemingly unrelated problems. The sensor is a thermistor similar to the IAT sensor, typically threaded into the engine block or thermostat housing near a coolant passage. Common affected vehicles: GM trucks (ECT connector corrosion from coolant leaks), Ford (dual ECT sensors β€” one for ECU, one for gauge), Honda (sensor location near thermostat housing).

**Understanding P0117 in Depth:** The Engine Coolant Temperature sensor is a cornerstone of engine management. Almost every system in the vehicle references coolant temperature data: fuel injection uses it to determine cold-start enrichment (cold engines need 2-3x more fuel than warm engines), ignition timing adjusts based on temperature to prevent knock, the cooling fan relay activates when temperature exceeds a threshold (typically 210-230Β°F), the transmission controller uses it to modify shift points, the EVAP system won't purge until the engine is warm, and the EGR system requires warm coolant before activating.

A single ECT sensor failure can create a cascade of seemingly unrelated symptoms because so many systems depend on its reading. The dashboard temperature gauge may use a separate sender unit (not the same as the ECT sensor), so the gauge can read correctly while the ECU receives incorrect data β€” this misleads many DIYers into thinking the cooling system is fine.

**Step-by-Step Diagnosis:** (1) Compare ECT reading on a scan tool with actual coolant temperature β€” use a non-contact thermometer on the thermostat housing. If the scan tool shows 40Β°F when the engine is clearly warm, the sensor is faulty. (2) Test sensor resistance: disconnect it and measure with a multimeter. At room temp (70Β°F): ~2,000-3,000 ohms. At operating temp (200Β°F): ~200-300 ohms. Compare to manufacturer specs. (3) Compare ECT reading with IAT reading when the engine is cold (sitting overnight) β€” they should be within a few degrees of each other. A large difference means one sensor is wrong. (4) Check the connector for coolant contamination β€” a leaking sensor or housing drips coolant onto the connector, causing corrosion. (5) Check for stored freeze frame data β€” this shows the exact conditions when the code was set and helps pinpoint the failure mode.

**Vehicle-Specific Notes:** GM trucks commonly develop ECT connector corrosion from coolant leaks at the sensor housing β€” look for green/orange coolant residue near the sensor. Ford vehicles often have two separate temperature sensors (one for ECU, one for gauge) in different locations β€” verify you're testing the correct one. Honda vehicles use a single sensor for both functions, making diagnosis simpler. Toyota ECT sensors are generally very reliable, rarely failing before 150K+ miles.

Symptoms of P0117

Common Causes

P0117 Reports by Year

2023
1
2017
1
2022
1

Real Owner Reports

From NHTSA complaint database β€” actual owner descriptions.

"I have experienced many issues with my vehicle that have been recalled in other vehicles of the same make/model/year but have been denied the assistance in fixing me car and preventing and further damage or risk of my safety due to my VIN not showing any recalls. I do believe that my safety has been"

β€” Ford Escape owner, 10/08/2023

"WHILE I WAS DRIVING ON THE HIGHWAY, A WARNING CAME ON SAYING THAT MY A/C WAS TURNED OFF BECAUSE MY ENGINE WAS OVERHEATING AND MY CHECK ENGINE LIGHT CAME ON. MY TEMPERATURE GAUGE WAS ON COLD. WHEN I FIRST TOOK MY CAR TO THE DEALERSHIP, THEY COULD NOT FIGURE OUT WHAT WAS WRONG. THEY CLEARED THE CODES "

β€” Chevrolet Cruze owner, 04/09/2017

"The ETC warning light came on, then the car slowed down then stalled out and would not crank back up. Upon running a diagnostic, the following error codes displayed; P0420, P0340, P0197, P0117, P1D83, P2181(several codes showing up more than once showing permanent, pending). This also happened befor"

β€” Dodge Journey owner, 12/06/2022

Source: NHTSA Complaints Database

Most Reported Vehicles for P0117

Based on NHTSA owner complaint data.

Diagnostic Tips

  1. Test ECT sensor resistance: ~2,000-3,000 ohms at room temperature, ~200-300 ohms at operating temperature (200Β°F). Compare with manufacturer specs.
  2. Compare ECT reading on scan tool with IAT reading when the engine is cold (sitting overnight). They should be within a few degrees of each other.
  3. If the cooling fans are misbehaving (always on or never on), the ECT sensor is the first suspect.
  4. Check for coolant contamination at the sensor connector β€” a leaking sensor or housing can cause corrosion.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are my cooling fans running all the time with P0117?
A low-voltage ECT reading tells the ECU the engine is extremely hot. The ECU activates the cooling fans at maximum as a safety measure, even though the actual temperature may be normal.
Can a short in the wiring cause P0117?
Yes β€” a wire touching the engine block (ground) will pull the ECT signal low, making the ECU think the engine is overheating.

What To Do Next

Possible Fixes

  • πŸ”§ Replace ECT sensor
  • πŸ”§ Repair wiring short
  1. 1
    Find your vehicle above

    Click your make and model for real owner reports and common causes specific to your vehicle.

  2. 2
    Check for recalls

    Go to nhtsa.gov/recalls and enter your VIN. Free repairs if covered.

  3. 3
    Get a professional diagnosis

    A code alone doesn't identify the exact failed part. A diagnostic ($50–$150) pinpoints the root cause.

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