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Parts for your 2000 Nissan Pulsar-Oil pump

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2000 Nissan Pulsar oil pump — what it does and when to sort it

Yes, the 2000 Nissan Pulsar absolutely uses an engine oil pump. Nissan’s Factory Service Manuals (FSM) for the Pulsar/Almera platform — N15 (GA16DE and SR20DE) and early N16 (QG18DE) — in the Lubrication System (LC) and Engine Mechanical (EM) sections specify a crank-driven internal-gear (trochoid) oil pump integrated into the front/timing cover with a built-in pressure relief valve. That means the oil pump is relevant to every 2000 Pulsar variant sold in Australia and New Zealand.

On this model, the oil pump’s job is to pull oil from the sump through the pickup, pressurise it, and feed the crankshaft, bearings, camshafts and timing chain tensioner. It keeps friction down, carries heat away, and ensures the engine survives stop–start commuting and country runs alike. Because it’s driven directly by the crank, it responds instantly to engine speed, maintaining pressure across the rev range.

Good oil and a quality filter are the pump’s best mates. Stick with the grade recommended in the owner’s book for local climate — commonly 5W-30 or 10W-40 — and change oil and filter on time (typically every 10,000 km or 6 months, or as per your service schedule). That keeps the pickup screen clear of sludge and the relief valve happy.

If the oil warning lamp flickers at hot idle, there’s rattly timing-chain noise on start-up, or a light bottom-end knock after a long run, don’t keep driving — check level, then have a mechanic verify oil pressure with a gauge. Low pressure isn’t always a failed pump