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Parts for your 1997 Daihatsu Gran move-Radiator
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1997 Daihatsu Gran Move radiator — purpose, care, and when to replace
Based on technical references including the Daihatsu Pyzar/Gran Move (1996–2002) workshop manual cooling system section, the Daihatsu Electronic Parts Catalogue (Cooling System/Radiator group), and Autodata service schedules for the HC‑E/HC‑EJ 1.5L petrol, the 1997 Daihatsu Gran Move is fitted with a liquid-cooling system that uses a front-mounted radiator, electric fan, thermostat, and expansion tank. So yes, a radiator absolutely applies to this vehicle.
The radiator’s job is simple but vital: it sheds heat from the engine coolant so the 1.5-litre four-cylinder stays in its sweet spot. Coolant circulates through the engine, picks up heat, then passes through the radiator’s core where airflow (and the electric fan at low speed) pulls that heat away. Keeping the radiator clean, leak-free, and flowing well protects the head gasket, alloy head, and everything under the bonnet from heat-related grief.
For ongoing care, a coolant change every 2 years or around 40,000–50,000 km is a safe bet for older Daihatsus running conventional green ethylene-glycol coolant. Use a quality premix (or 50/50 with demineralised water) that’s compatible with aluminium components. At each service, check for crusty green staining around the plastic end tanks, damp spots on the core, perished hoses, or a weeping cap. Make sure the fan cuts in and the heater blows hot — both hint at good circulation and proper bleeding.
Thinking about a replacement radiator for a 1997-daihatsu-gran-move radiator? Go for a unit that matches the original core size and mountings. If it’s an automatic, choose a radiator with the built-in transmission cooler and remember to cap the trans lines during the job, then top up and check ATF after. It’s smart to replace the thermostat, cap, and upper/lower hoses at the same time