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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Hilux surf-Radiator
Nulon Pro-Strength Extreme Cooling System Flush & Degreaser 500ml - PSCSF
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
Loctite 620 High Strength High Temp Retaining Compound 50ml - 235288
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2006 Toyota Hilux Surf Radiator — What it does and how to look after it
Based on Toyota technical literature for the N215-series Hilux Surf (the 2006 model year), the vehicle is factory-fitted with a liquid-cooling system using a crossflow aluminium radiator with plastic end tanks. Both the 1GR-FE 4.0L petrol and the 1KD-FTV 3.0L turbo-diesel use this setup, and automatic models commonly have an integrated transmission fluid cooler in the radiator’s lower tank. So yes — the radiator is absolutely relevant and used on the 2006 Toyota Hilux Surf.
The radiator’s job is straightforward: it sheds heat from the engine coolant so the motor keeps running at the right operating temperature under Aussie and Kiwi conditions — towing, beach runs, alpine climbs, and city crawls. Coolant flows from the engine to the radiator, air passes through the fins, and the heat is dumped. On autos, a section of the radiator also helps temper the transmission fluid.
For servicing, Toyota documentation specifies using Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (SLLC) pink premix. It’s designed to protect alloy components, water pumps and seals, and to resist corrosion and scale. Typical change intervals for SLLC are long, but age, kilometres, and usage (towing, dusty roads) can shorten that. Many owners opt to refresh coolant every 80,000 km or 5 years after the initial extended interval. Always use demineralised water if a top-up with concentrate is ever needed.
When replacing the radiator, it’s smart to do a system refresh: hoses, clamps, thermostat, and the radiator cap. Plastic end tanks can develop hairline cracks with age, fins clog with seeds, bugs, and red dust, and the ATF cooler within the radiator on automatics should be pressure-tested. If there’s any hint of “strawberry milkshake” (ATF mixed with coolant), the radiator and transmission service need urgent attention.
- Inspect under the bonnet for pink crust or sweet coolant smell — early signs of leaks.
- Clean the gap between the A/C condenser and radiator, packed debris kills airflow.
- Bleed the system properly: heater on HOT, engine at fast idle, squeeze upper hose, top up as bubbles purge.
- Use the correct cap rating and quality coolant to maintain system pressure and boil protection.
- If doing heavy towing with an auto, consider a fresh OE-spec radiator or a dedicated auxiliary trans cooler to reduce thermal load.
Popular questions
What coolant should go in a 2006 Hilux Surf radiator?
Toyota specifies Super Long Life Coolant (SLLC) pink premix. It’s a 50/50 ethylene glycol blend formulated for alloy engines and long service life. Avoid mixing with green or universal coolants, if switching types, fully flush with demineralised water first.
How often should the radiator be replaced?
There’s no fixed kilometre limit, but by 10–15 years the plastic end tanks and cores can age out. If there are leaks, overheating, brittle tanks, or repeated low-coolant warnings, replacement is due. Many owners proactively replace around 200,000–250,000 km, especially on autos with the integrated trans cooler.
What are the signs the auto trans cooler inside the radiator is failing?
Look for milky, pinkish transmission fluid, rising trans temps, or coolant that looks oily. Any cross-contamination calls for immediate radiator replacement and a thorough transmission service to prevent costly gearbox damage.