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Parts for your 2004 Toyota Land cruiser-Radiator
Nulon Pro-Strength Extreme Cooling System Flush & Degreaser 500ml - PSCSF
Fitment Notes:
Explore 4WD & Adventure
Loctite 620 High Strength High Temp Retaining Compound 50ml - 235288
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2004 Toyota Land Cruiser radiator — purpose, care, and replacement tips
Yes, a radiator is absolutely fitted and relevant on the 2004 Toyota Land Cruiser (100 Series). Toyota’s factory service information for UZJ100, HDJ100 and related variants specifies a liquid-cooled system using a crossflow aluminium radiator with plastic end tanks, plus a 1.1 bar (approx. 108 kPa) cap. The Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue lists the radiator assembly under the 16400‑xxxxx group for the 2UZ‑FE petrol and 1HD‑FTE/1HZ diesel engines, and many automatic models route transmission cooler lines through the lower tank. That’s straight from Toyota workshop manuals and EPC references used by dealers and independent workshops alike.
This radiator’s job is simple but critical: it pulls heat out of the engine coolant so the big V8 or straight‑six diesel stays in its sweet spot, even when towing a caravan through the ranges or crawling bush tracks. With the viscous fan, thermostat and shrouds doing their bit under the bonnet, the radiator dumps heat to ambient air via its fins, keeping temps stable and performance on point.
For owners, smart servicing goes a long way. Use Toyota‑spec coolant: Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premix) typically lasts up to 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then 80,000 km/5 years, older Long Life Coolant (red, concentrate) is usually 40,000 km/2 years when mixed with demineralised water. Always follow the label and local handbook for your market.
- Regular checks: look for dried pink/white crust around end tanks, hose necks and the cap. Any brown sludge hints at mixed or contaminated coolant.
- Keep it clean: after mud or beach runs, gently hose the fins from the engine side out. Avoid high pressure that can fold fins.
- Watch the temps: a climbing gauge under load, sweet coolant smell, or overflow bottle constantly dropping are red flags.
- Mind the mates: a tired radiator often tags along with a weak cap, ageing hoses, sticky thermostat or lazy fan clutch—check the lot.
Thinking about replacement? Go a quality core with the correct row count and fittings for your engine and trans. For autos, cap the transmission cooler lines and minimise ATF loss, consider an auxiliary cooler if you tow heavy. Fitment is straightforward: drain coolant, remove shroud and fan as needed, disconnect upper/lower hoses and (if fitted) trans lines, lift out, drop in the new unit, reconnect and refill. Bleed air with the heater set to HOT, use a spill‑free funnel or vacuum filler, and confirm the level over a couple of heat cycles. Done properly, the Land Cruiser will handle big kilometres without drama.
- Popular question 1: What coolant should go in a 2004 Toyota Land Cruiser radiator?
Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premixed) is commonly specified for many 2004 models, some markets use Toyota Long Life Coolant (red, concentrate) mixed with demineralised water. Stick with Toyota‑approved coolant to protect alloy components and avoid internal corrosion. Never mix pink and red—pick one type and fully flush if changing.
If unsure which your vehicle has run previously, do a complete drain and flush before refilling to the correct ratio and capacity shown in the local handbook or workshop manual.
- Popular question 2: How often should the radiator be flushed or replaced?
With Toyota SLLC (pink), many schedules allow up to 160,000 km/10 years initially, then 80,000 km/5 years. With LLC (red), plan on about 40,000 km/2 years. Harsh use—towing, outback heat, or frequent mud—justifies shorter intervals. Replace the radiator when you see leaks, swelling end tanks, repeated overheating, or fin damage that cleaning can’t fix.
Always replace the cap and suspect hoses during cooling system work, they’re cheap insurance on long trips.
- Popular question 3: What are the signs the radiator is failing on a 100 Series?
Common clues are coolant seepage at the plastic tanks, pink/white deposits, clogged or bent fins, rising temps on climbs, and the heater blowing cooler than normal. For autos, discoloured ATF at the cooler lines can hint at an internal tank leak—address this immediately to prevent transmission damage.
A cooling system pressure test and chemical block test can quickly confirm issues before they snowball.