Mercedes-Benz Camshaft Position Sensors

A Mercedes-Benz camshaft position sensor helps the engine computer track camshaft movement so it can coordinate fuel injection, ignition, and valve timing. When that signal becomes inaccurate, drivers may notice difficult starts, uneven acceleration, reduced power, or a check engine light. Replacing a confirmed faulty sensor can restore more consistent engine operation and prevent intermittent starting problems from becoming more disruptive.

Available applications may vary by engine, model year, cylinder bank, and intake or exhaust camshaft position. Genuine OEM sensors are built with the correct connector, mounting depth, seal, and electrical response for compatible Mercedes-Benz vehicles. Use your VIN and engine details to narrow the options, then browse the category for a factory-fit replacement suited to your vehicle.

31530128 - : Position Sensor for Mercedes-Benz Image

Position Sensor

Mercedes-Benz 003-153-01-28
$283.20
9050143 - : Position Sensor for Mercedes-Benz Image

Position Sensor

Mercedes-Benz 000-905-01-43
$74.40
61532428 - : Position Sensor for Mercedes-Benz Image

Position Sensor

Mercedes-Benz 006-153-24-28
$123.60
4539050800 - : Position Sensor for Mercedes-Benz Image

Position Sensor

Mercedes-Benz 453-905-08-00
Seat cushion. Left.
$91.20
6549053000 - : Position Sensor for Mercedes-Benz Image

Position Sensor

Mercedes-Benz 654-905-30-00
Sprinter van. 2.0l diesel. Crankshaft sensor.
$64.80
2769050900 - : Position Sensor for Mercedes-Benz Image

Position Sensor

Mercedes-Benz 276-905-09-00
$62.40
6269051100 - : Position Sensor for Mercedes-Benz Image

Position Sensor

Mercedes-Benz 626-905-11-00
$160.80

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Start With the Symptom, Then Confirm the Sensor


TL;DR: A camshaft-related trouble code should be verified before ordering a part. Confirm the VIN, engine family, sensor position, wiring condition, and cranking voltage. Genuine Mercedes-Benz sensors help reduce uncertainty around physical fit and signal compatibility.

Many shoppers reach this category after a scan tool reports a camshaft position or timing correlation code. That information is useful, but the code identifies the circuit or operating condition rather than automatically proving the sensor has failed. A loose terminal, oil-soaked connector, weak starting voltage, or timing issue can create a similar result. A quick inspection before purchase can save time and reduce the chance of replacing the wrong component.

Match the Sensor to Its Exact Job

Depending on the engine, a Mercedes-Benz may use multiple camshaft sensors. One unit may monitor an intake camshaft while another reads an exhaust camshaft. V-configured engines can also separate applications by cylinder bank. These sensors may share a similar housing but differ internally, so photo matching is not a dependable fitment method.

Before ordering, record the VIN, engine code, production date, bank designation, and sensor location. The production date can be especially important when Mercedes-Benz revised an engine or connector during the same model year.

Separate Sensor Failure From Starting-System Problems

Extended cranking is often associated with camshaft sensor failure, but it may also point to a weak battery or a worn starter. Low cranking speed can prevent the engine control module from receiving stable position data. Checking voltage and starter performance before replacing the sensor is a practical diagnostic step that many category pages overlook.

Misfires deserve the same caution. If the vehicle starts normally but runs unevenly under load, inspect the spark plugs and related ignition components. A sensor replacement will not solve a worn-plug or ignition-coil problem unless the camshaft signal is actually disrupting engine timing.

What OEM Construction Adds

A genuine Mercedes-Benz camshaft position sensor is manufactured around the original connector geometry, mounting surface, temperature range, and electronic output expected by the control module. An aftermarket sensor may bolt into place yet respond differently as engine temperature changes. That difference can contribute to recurring codes or intermittent drivability complaints.

During installation, inspect the connector pins and surrounding harness before plugging in the new unit. Oil contamination can travel beyond the sensor and compromise the electrical connection. Also verify whether the replacement includes a seal or O-ring, since reusing a hardened seal may allow a new leak.

Key Takeaways

  • Use the VIN and engine details instead of relying on sensor appearance.
  • Confirm intake, exhaust, Bank 1, or Bank 2 placement before ordering.
  • Rule out low battery voltage, starter issues, ignition faults, and damaged wiring.
  • Choose OEM construction for the intended connector fit and electrical signal.

Frequently Asked Questions

What symptoms can a faulty camshaft sensor cause?

Possible symptoms include long crank times, intermittent no-starts, hesitation, stalling, rough idle, reduced power, or a Check Engine light.

Diagnosis is recommended because these signs overlap with other faults.

Does a Mercedes-Benz engine have more than one camshaft position sensor?

Many engines do.

The total depends on the number of camshafts and cylinder banks, so each sensor’s location and function should be verified separately.

Should the code disappear immediately after replacement?

The stored code may need to be cleared with a scan tool. If it returns, inspect the wiring, connector, voltage supply, and mechanical timing rather than assuming the new sensor is defective.