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P006A — Barometric Absolute Collector Pressure - Mass Flow Correlation or volume

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Code

P006A

LAND ROVER P — Powertrain

Barometric Absolute Collector Pressure - Mass Flow Correlation or volume

Views: UK: 12 EN: 29 RU: 10
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Causes

  • Faulty or intermittent barometric pressure (BARO) or manifold absolute pressure (MAP) sensor
  • Faulty or contaminated mass air flow (MAF) sensor
  • Intake air leaks (vacuum leaks, cracked hoses, loose clamps, intercooler/turbo boost leaks)
  • Blocked or severely dirty air filter or intake tract restriction
  • Incorrect sensor supply/reference voltage, damaged wiring or poor connector grounds
  • Faulty PCM or software inconsistency (less common)

Symptoms

  • Malfunction Indicator Lamp (MIL) illuminated
  • Reduced engine power or limp mode on some vehicles
  • Rough idle, hesitation or stumbling on acceleration
  • Poor fuel economy and increased emissions
  • Difficulty starting in some cases or inconsistent idle
  • Possible misfires if fueling goes significantly out of correct range

What to check

  • Retrieve freeze-frame and live data with a diagnostic scan tool: record BARO, MAP, MAF, IAT, RPM, throttle position and fuel trims
  • Key ON, engine OFF: read BARO value and compare to local ambient pressure (scan tool) — should be within a few kPa of ambient
  • Compare MAF (g/s or lb/min) to calculated airflow from MAP, RPM and IAT (many scan tools provide ‘calculated airflow’ or 'MAF learned' data)
  • Visual inspection of intake plumbing, hoses, clamps, intercooler and air filter for leaks or restrictions
  • Inspect wiring and connectors for BARO/MAP and MAF for damage, corrosion or loose pins
  • Check for vacuum leaks with smoke machine or propane/butane enrichment while monitoring RPM/fuel trims

Signal parameters

  • Barometric pressure (BARO): should approximate ambient atmospheric pressure (typical ~100 kPa at sea level); difference should be within approximately 3–5 kPa
  • MAP at idle: lower than BARO due to intake vacuum — absolute value varies by engine and load
  • MAF vs calculated airflow: MAF sensor reading should closely match calculated airflow from MAP, RPM and IAT within manufacturer tolerances (large persistent deviation triggers the code)
  • MAF waveform: smooth, steady response to throttle changes; spikes or dropouts indicate sensor or wiring faults
  • Sensor supply: reference voltage typically near 5.0 V; sensor ground should be stable — check against vehicle specifications

Diagnostic algorithm

  1. Confirm code and record freeze-frame data. Do not replace parts without data supporting failure.
  2. With a scan tool, observe live BARO, MAP, MAF, IAT, RPM and fuel trims at idle and during steady-state throttle. Note discrepancies between MAF and calculated airflow.
  3. Key ON, engine OFF: check BARO reading vs ambient pressure. If BARO is clearly incorrect, inspect BARO/MAP sensor and wiring.
  4. Perform visual inspection of intake system and air filter. Repair or replace any damaged hoses, clamps, or air filter.
  5. Check electrical connectors and wiring to MAF and MAP/BARO for continuity, short to power/ground, corrosion or poor contacts. Backprobe and verify reference voltage and sensor ground.
  6. Clean MAF with approved cleaner if contaminated. Re-test. Do not touch the sensor element.
  7. Perform a smoke test or use propane/enrichment to detect intake leaks while watching live fuel trims and airflow readings.
  8. If wiring and intake are good but readings remain inconsistent, bench-test or swap the MAF and/or BARO/MAP sensor with known-good units per service manual procedures.
  9. Check for and install any PCM software updates from the manufacturer that address sensor correlation algorithms.
  10. After repairs, clear codes and road-test while monitoring live data to confirm MAF and BARO/MAP correlation remains within specification and code does not return.

Likely causes

  • Wiring/connectors to BARO/MAP or MAF (corrosion, broken wires, poor pin contact)
  • Contaminated or failed MAF sensor causing incorrect mass airflow reading
  • MAP/BARO sensor failure or incorrect BARO value (stuck or intermittent)
  • Intake tract leak (vacuum hose, intake boot, intercooler or charge pipe leak)
  • Clogged air filter or severe restriction downstream of MAF

Fault status

⚠️ Status
PCM detected poor correlation between barometric/collector pressure and measured mass airflow; fault may cause MIL on and degraded engine performance until corrected.
🟡 Repair difficulty: Medium
⏱️ Diagnostic time: 1-3 hours

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