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Parts for your 1998 Nissan Navara

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1998 Nissan Navara: Tough, tidy, and ready for work or weekends

The 1998 Nissan Navara is a no-fuss ute that’s happy on the farm track, job site, or State Highway. Known for its sturdy chassis and straightforward running gear, it came in a mix of cab styles with both petrol and diesel options across Aussie and Kiwi markets. Owners rate it for dependable towing manners, good payload for its size, and easy parts availability. With a manual gearbox common and simple 4x4 hardware on many models, it’s the sort of ute a home spanner-turner can actually service without drama.

When chasing parts, the basics are well covered: filters (oil, air, fuel), belts, coolant hoses, brake pads and rotors, clutch kits, shocks, and suspension bushes. Check build month, engine type, and whether it’s 4x2 or 4x4 to match fitment. Many 1998 Navaras respond well to preventative maintenance—fresh fluids, clean filters, and tidy electrics keep them feeling tight and reliable. If it’s doing regular towing, beach launches, or corrugated gravel, consider uprated suspension components and more frequent inspections to stay ahead of wear.

  • Change engine oil and filter every 5,000–10,000 kilometres, based on use.
  • Top up and test coolant, keep hoses and clamps in good nick.
  • Inspect brakes, wheel bearings, and axle seals for leaks or play.
  • Grease driveline points, check 4WD hubs and transfer engagement.
  • Look for rust around chassis rails, tray mounts, sills, and floor.
  • Test electrics: alternator output, battery health, earth straps, lights.

Tyre pressures, alignment, and a tidy air filter make a noticeable difference. Keep receipts, note kilometres between services, and stay current with rego or WOF to avoid surprises.

What engines did the 1998 Nissan Navara have?

Depending on market and trim, it was sold with a petrol four and several diesel options, in both 4x2 and 4x4. Manual five-speed gearboxes were common, with simple part-time 4WD on many models. Always confirm the exact engine code and build month to match parts correctly.

What’s a sensible service interval and oil choice?

For everyday driving, service every 10,000 kilometres or 6 months. If it tows, sees beach work, or plenty of gravel, halve that to around 5,000 kilometres. Diesel owners usually run a quality 15W-40 meeting the right API spec, many petrol models are happy on a 10W-40. Check the handbook or a trusted local mechanic for the exact grade and capacity.

What common issues should owners watch for?

Rust in chassis rails and tray mounts, tired suspension bushes and ball joints, weeping axle seals, and ageing alternators or starters are typical on older utes. On diesels, keep glow plugs and their relay healthy, and give the cooling system attention—radiator, fan clutch, and hoses—especially if it’s worked hard.

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