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Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2025
These worked fine and all four were half the cost of one at the dealers parts dept.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2025
Great item, and great price.
Jerrel J. Bailey
Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2025
Before you purchase, please check and make sure that you can get the sensors calibrated to your vehicles computer. Some cars require a device to calibrate. Others can be calibrated following a manual process, detailed in the owners manual or a YouTube video. These were for a Toyota Prius second generation, which required a process that I was able to complete without any outside assistance or equipment. I’m very satisfied with my purchase.
JJones
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2025
Worked as advertised. Installed and automatically synced to my tpms system. Great product.
Lucky
Reviewed in the United States on April 5, 2025
Work perfect for 2011 Civic. Programmed easily. No more TPMS light.
Sylvain
Reviewed in Canada on March 27, 2024
J'ai fait une saison complète et ils fonctionnent toujours. Une fois installé sur le véhicule, il est important de savoir que les capteurs doivent être activés par un ordinateur. Je vous conseille d'éviter de le faire vous-même. Plusieurs garages peuvent activer les capteurs pour quelques dollars ou par service de courtoisie.
Tammy
Reviewed in the United States on December 20, 2024
Shop installed sensors with new tires. But since the car was so old I figured it was a good idea to install new sensors (TPMS light was not on) but after about a month my TPMS light came on and has been on ever since. I assume its a bad battery. Not sure how to fix other than have the tires removed to determine which one is bad.
CUAUHTEMOC SÁNCHEZ
Reviewed in Mexico on September 17, 2023
Excelente producto, solo que no los activan en cualquier lado (con un escaner convencional o básico no se puede), tiene que ser en un taller especializado o que tengan lector de sensores
Alex
Reviewed in Canada on March 20, 2023
Happy with the purchase, one thing to note the sensors do not have the id's printed, unlike the oem sensors.My suggestion is that you take pictures of the sensors and or do your research before buying the sensors.Most people with not have an issue, any car 2012 or newer auto learns the new sensors id'sAll that's needed is to erase the old sensors from the ecu. Any car prior to 2012. the sensors need to be erase from ecu and manually programmed with a scanner.
Customer
Reviewed in Canada on December 24, 2023
I purchased these sensors for my Hknda Odyssey winter wheels. It suppoust to programmed but when they installed in Honda service they did not works. So They have to programm it again. That cost me additional money. Worst thing happened when I took the car from service. Sensors stop working completly next day. I took it back to service and they told me that sensors need to be replaced.Waste of money and time. Don't buy it.
YABBADABBADEALS
Reviewed in Canada on November 10, 2023
Worked well and programmed easily but will have to see long term how the reliability is.
Juan Martinez
Reviewed in the United States on September 8, 2022
The value is okay but looks like the manufacturer doesn't test all their products, when three of four are good but one is defective. At the end of the line is more expensive than you expected.
DJ Hostetler
Reviewed in the United States on November 29, 2021
8/2024 Update: The sensors have all seemed to have died or gone dormant after sitting idle for a couple months. The battery on the car was completely depleted it sat so long, but the TPMS light also came on. Checking with the ODB2 tool it showed all 4 sensors were not communicating. I've tried to trigger them and get them communicating but the relearn tools that are cheap don't seem to actually trigger dormant sensors. So I will see if I can get Walmart or a tire shop to reawaken the sensors and I can reprogram them in again. But if they did all die they didn't last 3 years or less than half what I would expect for TPMS sensors to last.11/2021 Review: The sensors work with my wife's 2008 Civic with no real issues I can think of. Once they were activated and the sensor IDs programmed into the Civic it took about 5 miles of driving after getting them topped off for air (one tire was at 28lbs so it wasn't going to let the light turn off, most go off when they're below 90% recommended pressure). So pretty simple and straight forward. But that was after the ordeal with Walmart auto center.I took these in to Walmart to have them put in the sensors and activate them for me since they only charge $15 per sensor as a flat tire repair. Not a terrible price to install all 4 sensors which were less than $60 themselves for the set. But I made sure to tell them multiple times to activate and verify the sensors worked before installing them so we knew they worked before hand so there wouldn't be a problem since if any didn't work I'd need to return and replace them.Well they finished installing them at 6pm when they gave back the keys and old sensors and said they couldn't activate these and to take them to a dealer and left me hanging. The very thing I didn't want them to do and told the supervisor who checked me in to make sure wouldn't be done.So I spoke to a store manager and eventually both manager/supervisor of the auto care and they took another crack at it the next weekend saying they'd make it right one way or another. Now I took photos of the sensors before I gave them to them incase they couldn't program in TPMS sensor info into a Honda. The night I got it back when they said take it to a dealer I got out my Foxwell ODB2 tool https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09BNDS4VD and programmed in the new sensors' IDs hoping maybe they activated the sensors and just couldn't program them into the car and just didn't articulate it. No, they didn't even try to activate the sensors because they didn't bother to check the brand of the sensors and just thought a dealer can deal with it. Luckily I had the photos when I went back and the manager was able to activate the sensors but he couldn't program them and thought they weren't connecting to the Honda because his ODB2 tools there didn't allow them to program in the IDs, like mine did. So he gave me a name of a mechanic and basically said there was nothing else they could do other than install other sensors if I wanted for no additional charge. But all that was needed was the air to be topped off and the car to be driven for the sensors to start giving data to the car's computer and the link would be complete. Just sitting in the bay wouldn't do anything to get data streaming.So the sensors work perfectly so far for the last week I've had them in and they work with the 2008 Honda Civic like the description said. So no complaints on the function or price, only getting them in and the installer's knowing the brand and the process to activate them. I would just make sure if you take it somewhere to have it installed to make sure they can activate CDWTPS sensors (which looks like even Walmart can) AND they can program in new sensor IDs into your vehicle or you can do it yourself. I know some may go the route of reprogramming the sensors with the old sensors IDs that are in the vehicle already, but make sure they can do either before they take the keys. I believe most dedicated tire retailers should like Discount Tire or Dealer Tire should be able to reprogram either the sensors or the car's computer.All said and done it was about $120-130 to replace all 4 TPMS sensors and these do a decent job for less than the price of 1 OEM replacement. Funny enough they worked better at the air pump at the gas station near me than the old sensors I had. So pretty happy overall with the product just wish Walmart didn't try to pass the buck to a dealer and be lazy.
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