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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Ist-Radiator

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Kelpro Radiator Support Mounting Stud - 29801

Kelpro Radiator Support Mounting Stud - 29801

$16
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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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Gates Radiator Hose Lower - 05-1804

Gates Radiator Hose Lower - 05-1804

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$81
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Gates Radiator Hose - 05-1803

Gates Radiator Hose - 05-1803

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$36
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Gates Radiator Hose Upper - 05-1888

Gates Radiator Hose Upper - 05-1888

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$122
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Explore 4WD & Adventure

Gates Hose Cutter up to 3in ID - 91143

Gates Hose Cutter up to 3in ID - 91143

$213
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Showing 1 - 8 of 8 products

2006 Toyota Ist radiator — purpose, care, and replacement

Based on Toyota’s technical literature for the NCP60/61 platform — including the Toyota Repair Manual, New Car Features (NCF) for the 1NZ‑FE/2NZ‑FE engines, and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) — the 2006 Toyota Ist is fitted with a conventional liquid‑cooling system and a front‑mounted aluminium radiator. It’s absolutely relevant to this vehicle, there’s no variant of the 2006 Ist that runs without a radiator.

The radiator’s job is straightforward but vital: move heat out of the engine so it stays in its happy operating window. Coolant absorbs heat from the cylinder head and block, heads to the radiator, and dumps that heat to outside air with the help of the cooling fans. The pressure cap lifts the boiling point, the thermostat manages warm‑up, and the fans kick in as needed. On auto models, the lower tank often houses a small transmission fluid cooler, so the radiator also helps protect the gearbox.

Owners across Australia and New Zealand will get the best out of a 2006 Toyota Ist radiator with a few easy habits and timely servicing.

  • Use Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premixed) and don’t mix types or colours.
  • Top up only when cool, check the overflow bottle sits between MIN and FULL.
  • Inspect hoses, clamps, and the radiator cap for perishing or weak sealing.
  • Keep the fins clear of bugs and road grime, rinse gently from the engine side out.

Service interval guidance from Toyota for SLLC is typically up to 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then every 80,000 km or 5 years. If the history’s unknown, a coolant change is cheap insurance. When replacing coolant, run the heater on HOT, use a spill‑free funnel, and gently burp the upper hose to purge air. After a drive, recheck the level as trapped bubbles settle out.

Thinking about a radiator replacement on a 2006 Toyota Ist? It’s a tidy DIY for a competent home spanner‑spinner. Choose an OE‑quality core, swap across the fan shroud and rubbers, and always fit a fresh cap. For autos, cap the transmission cooler lines, replace the sealing washers if fitted, and verify the ATF level afterwards. Signs it’s time include persistent overheating at idle, pinhole leaks or crusty green/white deposits, fins folding away from the tubes, or chocolate‑milk contamination (stop and diagnose immediately if you see this).

Buttoned‑up properly — good coolant, healthy cap, clean fins, tight hoses — a 2006 Toyota Ist radiator will clock up the kilometres without drama.

FAQ: What coolant does a 2006 Toyota Ist use, and how much does it take?

The 2006 Ist is designed for Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink, pre‑mixed 50/50). It’s silicate‑ and borate‑free to suit the alloy components. Capacity is roughly 5.5–6.0 litres depending on engine/trim. If switching from an unknown coolant, flush thoroughly and stick with one type.

FAQ: How often should the coolant be changed on a 2006 Toyota Ist?

With Toyota SLLC, the typical schedule is up to 160,000 km or 10 years for the first change, then every 80,000 km or 5 years. Harsh conditions, non‑genuine coolant, or any contamination warrant shorter intervals. Inspect annually for level, colour, and odour, and check the cap and hoses.

FAQ: Can a DIYer replace the 2006 Toyota Ist radiator at home?

Yes, with basic tools and patience. Drain the system, remove the fan shroud, detach upper/lower hoses (and auto trans cooler lines if fitted), lift the radiator, swap mounts and shroud, refit, then refill and bleed with the heater on. Expect 2–4 hours. Dispose of old coolant responsibly and recheck levels after the first drive.