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Parts for your 1987 Suzuki Jimny-Oil seals

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1987 Suzuki Jimny Oil Seals — What They Do and When to Replace Them

Oil seals are absolutely used on the 1987 Suzuki Jimny (also sold locally as the Suzuki Sierra/Samurai). Technical sources including the Suzuki SJ410/SJ413 Factory Service Manual (engine, transmission and axle sections), the Suzuki Electronic Parts Catalogue for 1987 Jimny/Sierra models, and aftermarket workshop manuals (e.g., Haynes for SJ413/Samurai) all list multiple oil seals throughout the driveline and engine. These references specify crankshaft, camshaft, gearbox input/output, transfer case, differential side and pinion, and front knuckle/axle seals, confirming the part is relevant and fitted to this vehicle.

On a 1987 Jimny, oil seals keep lubricants in and contaminants out. They sit where rotating shafts exit housings, stopping engine oil, gearbox oil, diff oil or transfer case fluid from sneaking past. That means happier bearings, quieter running and fewer oily driveways. Because these rigs often see off‑road work in Aussie and Kiwi conditions—dust, mud, creek crossings—seals earn their keep.

Typical seals on this model include:

  • Engine: front crank seal, rear main seal, camshaft seal (on G-series), distributor O-ring
  • Transmission/Transfer: gearbox input and output seals, transfer case input and output seals
  • Axles/Diffs: front knuckle/axle oil seals, differential side seals, pinion seals (front and rear)

Owners should keep an eye out for weeping at the bellhousing, behind crank pulleys, inside front steering knuckles, or around diff flanges. A sudden drop in oil level, oil mist on underbody, or greasy brakes near a leaking axle seal are all tell-tales. During regular servicing (every 10,000–15,000 km or at each WOF/safety check if sooner), it’s smart to:

  1. Inspect for leaks and dust-lip damage, especially after water crossings or dusty trips.
  2. Check breather hoses on diffs and transfer—blocked breathers pressurise housings and push oil past good seals.
  3. Verify shaft surfaces: worn grooves on yokes or pulleys chew out new seals fast