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Parts for your 2002 Toyota Crown-Radiator

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Rislone High Mileage Compression Repair 500ml - 4447

Rislone High Mileage Compression Repair 500ml - 4447

$38
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Prestone Radiator Flush / Cleaner 650ml - AS105Y

Prestone Radiator Flush / Cleaner 650ml - AS105Y

$24
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Nulon Diesel Injector Cleaner 300mL - DIC

Nulon Diesel Injector Cleaner 300mL - DIC

$34
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Kelpro Radiator Support Mounting Stud - 29801

Kelpro Radiator Support Mounting Stud - 29801

$16
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Repco Radiator Stop Leak 500ml - RRADSTOP500
Clearance

Repco Radiator Stop Leak 500ml - RRADSTOP500

$2
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Rislone Super Radiator Flush 650mL - 41201

Rislone Super Radiator Flush 650mL - 41201

$24
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Explore 4WD & Adventure

Wynn's Radiator Flush 325mL - 65332
Clearance

Wynn's Radiator Flush 325mL - 65332

$25
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Nice Products Radiator Drain Tap 1/8 In - NRC13

Nice Products Radiator Drain Tap 1/8 In - NRC13

$28
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Nulon Engine Stop Smoke 500ml - SS
Clearance

Nulon Engine Stop Smoke 500ml - SS

$10
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Nulon Engine Oil Stop Leak 300ml - ESL

Nulon Engine Oil Stop Leak 300ml - ESL

$39
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Repco Radiator Cooling System Kit - RTT1019

Repco Radiator Cooling System Kit - RTT1019

$906
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Lucas Power Steering Stop Leak 355mL - 10008

Lucas Power Steering Stop Leak 355mL - 10008

$44
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Repco Radiator Pressure Tester Kit - RTT1017

Repco Radiator Pressure Tester Kit - RTT1017

$617
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T&E Tools Radiator Back Flusher

T&E Tools Radiator Back Flusher

$92
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Irontite Coolant System Sealer 600g - 960101

Irontite Coolant System Sealer 600g - 960101

$67
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Toledo Radiator Back Flusher - 308237

Toledo Radiator Back Flusher - 308237

$116
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Toledo Radiator Fin Straightener - 308240

Toledo Radiator Fin Straightener - 308240

$22
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Rislone Hy-Per Cool Super Coolant 473ml - 41300

Rislone Hy-Per Cool Super Coolant 473ml - 41300

$39
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T&E Tools Radiator Fin Straightener

T&E Tools Radiator Fin Straightener

$43
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CRC Fibre Lock 946ml - 1224
CRC

CRC Fibre Lock 946ml - 1224

$119
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Flashlube Diesel Conditioner 50ml - FD50MX20B

Flashlube Diesel Conditioner 50ml - FD50MX20B

$7
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Gates Hose Cutter up to 3in ID - 91143

Gates Hose Cutter up to 3in ID - 91143

$213
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Lucas Transmission Fix Stop Slip 700mL - 10009

Lucas Transmission Fix Stop Slip 700mL - 10009

$47
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Repco Fuel System Cleaner 500mL - RFSC500

Repco Fuel System Cleaner 500mL - RFSC500

$35
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Bar's Bugs Windscreen Cleaner 375ml - BB375

Bar's Bugs Windscreen Cleaner 375ml - BB375

$8
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Morey's Oil Stabiliser 1L - MOS

Morey's Oil Stabiliser 1L - MOS

$35
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Tee-Kay Head Chek - HEADCHEK

Tee-Kay Head Chek - HEADCHEK

$105
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Morey's Diesel Injector Cleaner 1L - MDIC

Morey's Diesel Injector Cleaner 1L - MDIC

$45
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Trico Vision Washer Additive 500ml - A90020

Trico Vision Washer Additive 500ml - A90020

$14
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Morey's Injector Cleaner 250ml - MIC

Morey's Injector Cleaner 250ml - MIC

$17
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Rain-X Washer Fluid Additive 500ml - 64 RX11806D

Rain-X Washer Fluid Additive 500ml - 64 RX11806D

$32
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Nulon Octane Boost & Clean 300ml - OBC

Nulon Octane Boost & Clean 300ml - OBC

$41
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Chemtech Diesel Power Fuel Additive 1L - CDP-1L

Chemtech Diesel Power Fuel Additive 1L - CDP-1L

$112
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Showing 40 - 78 of 99 products

2002 Toyota Crown radiator — purpose, care, and replacement

Yes, the 2002 Toyota Crown uses a front‑mounted liquid‑cooling radiator. Technical references that confirm this include the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) for the S170‑series Crown (1999–2003), which lists a radiator assembly, cap, shroud, fan(s), and hoses in the Cooling section, Toyota repair manuals for the 1JZ/2JZ engines, which detail an aluminium cross‑flow radiator and pressurised cooling circuit, and the model’s owner literature noting coolant capacity and radiator cap cautions. So the radiator is absolutely relevant to every 2002 Crown variant (e.g., JZS17x petrol sixes and related trims).

On this Crown, the radiator’s job is to dump engine heat into the airstream so the straight‑six can run at a sweet, stable temperature. Coolant flows from the engine through the top tank, across the core, and out the bottom tank—helped along by the water pump, thermostat, and either an electric or viscous fan. Many automatic models route transmission fluid through a small heat exchanger inside the radiator tank to keep shifts happy, too.

For regular servicing in Australia and New Zealand, stick to the right coolant and sensible intervals. Toyota specified ethylene‑glycol long‑life coolant (often the red Toyota LLC in period), many owners now use Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink) after a full flush. As a rule of thumb: inspect coolant level/condition at every service, pressure‑test the cap, and renew coolant every 2–4 years (or 40,000–100,000 km) depending on coolant type and usage. Use demineralised water if mixing concentrate, and always bleed the system properly with the heater on to avoid air pockets.

Replace the radiator if there’s cracking at the plastic tanks, green crust around the crimps, overheating at speed, a sweet coolant smell, or if the fins are badly corroded from coastal air. Autos deserve an extra check: any milkiness in ATF can mean an internal cooler failure—don’t drive it. When swapping the unit, drain responsibly, cap or plug trans cooler lines, transfer the fan shroud and sensors, fit new hoses and clamps, refill with the correct mix, bleed, and verify the fans cycle on. Country roads, summer heat, and stop‑start traffic are tough here—preventive replacement of an ageing radiator can be cheaper than a head‑gasket job.

  • Check: coolant colour/level, cap seal and rating, hose softness/bulges, fan operation, and fin cleanliness.
  • Service: flush with a quality cleaner, rinse with demin water, refill with the specified coolant, and bleed fully.
  • Protect: keep bugs and debris out of the core, straighten light fin bends carefully, avoid hard water top‑ups.

Popular question 1: What coolant should a 2002 Toyota Crown use, and how much does it take?

Toyota long‑life coolant is the go—period‑correct red LLC or pink SLLC if the system has been properly flushed before switching. Avoid universal mixes unless they clearly meet Toyota specs. The typical six‑cylinder Crown takes roughly the high‑single‑digit litres of coolant when drained, check the owner info and top tank markings for your exact engine and spec.

Whatever you choose, stick to the same chemistry, use demin water if mixing concentrate, and replace the radiator cap with the correct pressure rating if it’s old.

Popular question 2: What are the tell‑tale signs the Crown’s radiator needs replacing?

Look for hairline cracks in the plastic tanks, green or white crust around the crimps, damp spots on the core, a sweet smell after shutdown, rising temps at highway speed, or fans running constantly. Brown sludgy coolant or oily contamination is a red flag.

On automatics, pinkish or milky ATF can point to an internal cooler leak—stop driving and sort it immediately to save the gearbox.

Popular question 3: Is it safe to drive with a small coolant leak?

Not really. Even a slow leak can turn into an overheat on a hill or in summer traffic, risking a warped head or blown gasket. If you must move the car, keep trips short, carry water, and watch the gauge like a hawk.

Sealants are only an emergency patch and can clog passages. A proper repair or radiator replacement is the right fix for a 2002 Crown.

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