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Parts for your 2002 Toyota Bb-Air filter

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Repco Air Blow Gun - 110mm Nozzle - RBG110

Repco Air Blow Gun - 110mm Nozzle - RBG110

$27
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Repco Radiator Fin Straightener & Cleaner - RST18

Repco Radiator Fin Straightener & Cleaner - RST18

$20
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Mechpro Air Filter Regulator - MPBFR

Mechpro Air Filter Regulator - MPBFR

$39
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Mechpro Air Filter Regulator- MPFR-1 - MPFR-1

Mechpro Air Filter Regulator- MPFR-1 - MPFR-1

$50
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Repco Air Blow Gun - 508mm Nozzle - RBG508

Repco Air Blow Gun - 508mm Nozzle - RBG508

$35
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Repco Air Blow Gun - 300mm Nozzle - RBG300

Repco Air Blow Gun - 300mm Nozzle - RBG300

$32
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Explore 4WD & Adventure

Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow 355mm - 321101

Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow 355mm - 321101

$39
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Filter Tip Replacement 55800 - TOX55801

Filter Tip Replacement 55800 - TOX55801

$117
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Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow Rubber 60mm - 321103

Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow Rubber 60mm - 321103

$32
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Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow 100mm - 321100

Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow 100mm - 321100

$38
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Mechpro HVLP Touch Up Spray Gun 2pc - MPBAT4

Mechpro HVLP Touch Up Spray Gun 2pc - MPBAT4

$216
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Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow 60mm - 321102

Toledo Air Blow Gun - High Flow 60mm - 321102

$37
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Repco 1L Spray Cleaning Gun - RST246

Repco 1L Spray Cleaning Gun - RST246

$156
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Viper Brite Coil Cleaner 3.78L - RT300G

Viper Brite Coil Cleaner 3.78L - RT300G

$337
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Mastercool 10Kg Recovery Cylinder - RECOVERY10

Mastercool 10Kg Recovery Cylinder - RECOVERY10

$789
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Recycle Module To Suit EQX69400 - EQX69500

Recycle Module To Suit EQX69400 - EQX69500

$1,145
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Milwaukee M12 Compact Blower (Tool Only) - M12BBL-0

Milwaukee M12 Compact Blower (Tool Only) - M12BBL-0

$191
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T&E Tools Radiator Back Flusher

T&E Tools Radiator Back Flusher

$92
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Showing 1 - 22 of 22 products

2002 Toyota bB Air Filter — What It Does and How to Look After It

Based on technical sources, the 2002 Toyota bB (NCP30/NCP31, 1NZ‑FE/2NZ‑FE petrol) is fitted with a conventional engine air filter in an air cleaner box. Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue lists an “air cleaner element” for these models (commonly Toyota part 17801‑21030, with equivalent aftermarket listings in DENSO and Sakura catalogues), and the Toyota bB service manual for the NCP3# series specifies inspection and replacement intervals. So yes—an air filter is absolutely relevant and used on this vehicle.

The air filter’s job is straightforward: keep dust, pollen, and grit out of the engine while letting plenty of clean air in. That clean airflow helps the 1NZ‑FE/2NZ‑FE burn fuel efficiently, protecting cylinders and sensors, smoothing idle, and keeping fuel economy and power on song. A choked filter can make the bB feel a bit breathless, raise fuel use, and in the worst case allow abrasive particles to accelerate engine wear.

For Aussie and New Zealand conditions, it’s smart to check the filter at every service (about 10,000–15,000 kilometres or 6–12 months). Replacement typically lands between 20,000 and 40,000 kilometres, earlier if the car sees gravel roads, roadworks, or beach air. Toyota documentation allows light cleaning (gentle air from the clean side), but being a dry paper element, once it’s dark, dusty, or damaged, it’s time for a new one.

Under the bonnet, the air cleaner box sits in the engine bay with simple clips or screws. Pop the lid, lift the old element straight up, and seat the new one with the rubber seal fully home. Make sure no leaves or sand sit in the box, a quick wipe helps. Close the lid evenly so it seals all round—unfiltered bypass air is the enemy.

Handy signs it’s due: a noticeable drop in pep, rough idle, soot‑stained pleats, or lower than usual fuel economy. Given filters are inexpensive, many owners just fit a fresh element at each major service to keep the bB happy.

  • Recommended practice: inspect every service, replace 20,000–40,000 km (earlier in dusty use).
  • Use quality parts: OEM 17801‑21030 or reputable equivalents that match the NCP30/31 housing.
  • Avoid washing paper filters, if blowing out, use low pressure from the clean side only.

Where is the air filter on a 2002 Toyota bB?

It lives in the air cleaner box in the engine bay, typically a black plastic housing with clips or screws. Lift the lid and the rectangular element sits right inside.

If unsure, follow the intake snorkel from the front of the bay—it leads straight to the air cleaner box that holds the filter.

How often should the 2002 bB air filter be replaced in Australia or New Zealand?

Check it every 10,000–15,000 km and replace around 20,000–40,000 km, depending on conditions. Dusty driving calls for more frequent changes to protect the engine and keep performance crisp.

If the pleats look dark or clogged, or the car feels sluggish, don’t wait for the next interval—fit a fresh element.

What part number fits the 2002 Toyota bB?

Many 2002 bB models with the 1NZ‑FE/2NZ‑FE use Toyota 17801‑21030 (check the build plate/VIN to confirm). Quality aftermarket equivalents are widely catalogued to the NCP30/NCP31 air box.

Always match by engine code and model code to be safe, the seal should sit snugly in the housing with no gaps.