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Parts for your 2002 Toyota Corolla-Radiator

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Nulon Permanent Head Gasket Repair 750ml - PHGR-750

Nulon Permanent Head Gasket Repair 750ml - PHGR-750

$98
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Nulon Petrol System Extreme Clean 500ml - PEC

Nulon Petrol System Extreme Clean 500ml - PEC

$50
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Nulon Pro-Strength Diesel Turbo Cleaner 500ml - PDTC

Nulon Pro-Strength Diesel Turbo Cleaner 500ml - PDTC

$46
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Nulon Radiator Stop Leak 300mL - R50

Nulon Radiator Stop Leak 300mL - R50

$21
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Nulon Engine Oil Stop Leak 300ml - ESL

Nulon Engine Oil Stop Leak 300ml - ESL

$39
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Nulon Diesel Injector Cleaner 300mL - DIC

Nulon Diesel Injector Cleaner 300mL - DIC

$34
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Nulon Diesel System Extreme Clean 500ml - DEC

Nulon Diesel System Extreme Clean 500ml - DEC

$46
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Nulon Octane Boost & Clean 300ml - OBC

Nulon Octane Boost & Clean 300ml - OBC

$41
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Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1090000P

Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1090000P

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$1,135
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Denso Radiator OE Quality - A221-A345

Denso Radiator OE Quality - A221-A345

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$415
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Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR608000P

Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR608000P

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$578
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Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR511000P

Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR511000P

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$964
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Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1348000P

Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1348000P

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$1,067
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Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1191000S

Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1191000S

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$1,176
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Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR565000S

Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR565000S

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$727
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Doowon Radiator OE Quality - RAD2146D

Doowon Radiator OE Quality - RAD2146D

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$513
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Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1355000P

Mahle Radiator OE Quality - CR1355000P

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$662
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Showing 1 - 39 of 4402 products

2002 Toyota Corolla radiator — purpose, maintenance, and replacement

Yes, the 2002 Toyota Corolla is fitted with a conventional liquid-cooling radiator. This isn’t optional kit — it’s standard equipment. That’s confirmed by Toyota’s Repair Manual for ZZE121/ZZE122 series Corollas, the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue listing the radiator assembly (commonly DENSO-built), and OE parts numbers for the complete radiator and cap. So the radiator is absolutely relevant to this model.

On this Corolla’s 1.8L 1ZZ‑FE (and market‑specific 1.6L 3ZZ‑FE), the radiator sheds engine heat from the coolant as it passes through fine aluminium fins, with electric fans pulling air through at idle or low speed. It works alongside the thermostat, water pump, heater core, hoses, and a 0.9 bar radiator cap. Many automatic models also route transmission fluid through an integrated cooler inside the radiator end tank.

For everyday servicing, the goal is stable temps and clean coolant. Use Toyota‑approved coolant — Toyota Long Life (red) or Toyota Super Long Life (pink) — and don’t mix types. In AU/NZ practice, expect coolant changes roughly every 2–4 years or 40,000–80,000 km, depending on coolant type and condition, always follow the owner’s manual or coolant label. A 50/50 premix with demineralised water hits the sweet spot for corrosion protection and boiling/ freezing margins.

Quick checks under the bonnet help avoid dramas:

  • Look for dried pink/white crust around end tanks, seams, and hose necks.
  • Squeeze upper/lower hoses (engine cold) — they should be firm, not spongy or cracked.
  • Confirm fans cycle on with A/C or at temp, watch the gauge for steady mid‑range.
  • Inspect the cap seal and ensure the correct pressure rating (about 0.9 bar/88 kPa).

When replacement’s due (age, leaks, brittle tanks), choose a quality OE‑equivalent unit (DENSO, KOYORAD, or genuine Toyota). Renew the cap, hoses, and clamps while you’re there. Drain, flush until clear, refit, then refill slowly with the heater on hot and bleed air properly, top up the overflow bottle to the “Full” mark. For autos, cap the trans cooler lines during the job and check ATF level after the first warm drive.

Keeping the radiator healthy protects the head gasket, prevents hot‑day overheating in Aussie and Kiwi summers, and helps the Corolla stay frugal and reliable for many more kilometres.

What coolant should be used in a 2002 Toyota Corolla radiator?

Use Toyota Genuine coolant: Long Life (red) or Super Long Life (pink). Stick with one type — don’t mix colours or brands. A 50/50 premix with demineralised water is typical, delivering solid corrosion protection and stable temperatures. Capacity varies a bit by engine and heater core volume, but expect roughly 5–6 litres total after a full drain and proper bleed.

If switching types, fully flush the system first. Always check the owner’s manual or coolant container for the exact specification recommended for your market.

How often should the coolant be changed?

Service intervals depend on the coolant fitted. Toyota Long Life (red) is often serviced about every 2 years or ~40,000–50,000 km, while Toyota Super Long Life (pink) can run longer intervals when the system is clean and sealed. Many AU/NZ workshops aim for 2–4 years or 40,000–80,000 km, with annual inspections for level, colour, and odour.

If the coolant looks rusty, oily, or brown, or the overflow bottle keeps dropping, service it sooner and check for leaks.

What are common radiator failure symptoms on this model?

Tell‑tales include coolant weeping at plastic end‑tank seams, a sweet smell after shutdown, overheating at idle (fan or flow issues), and brown sludge from mixed coolants. On autos, milky ATF or pink “strawberry milkshake” suggests an internal cooler failure — stop driving and repair immediately.

Any overheating event warrants investigation: pressure test the system, check the cap, thermostat, fans, and scan for fault codes before more damage occurs.