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Parts for your 2008 Nissan X-trail-Heater hose
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2008 Nissan X-Trail (T31) Heater Hose — What it does and how to look after it
Yes, the 2008 Nissan X-Trail uses heater hoses. This is confirmed in the Nissan X-Trail T31 Service Manual (Heater & Air Conditioning/HA section), which shows the coolant circuit running through two heater hoses to the heater core in the dash. The Nissan FAST parts catalogue (Heater & Piping group) also lists specific feed and return heater hoses for T31 petrol and diesel variants, and major hose manufacturers’ catalogues for 2008 X-Trail applications back this up. So the heater hose is absolutely relevant on this model.
On the T31, the heater hoses carry hot engine coolant from the engine to the heater core and back again. Cabin heat comes from air blowing across that hot core, so if a hose fails, it can mean poor heater performance, coolant loss, or in the worst case an overheating engine. Most 2008 X-Trails route coolant directly through the core and control cabin temperature with blend doors, which keeps the hose layout simple and reliable.
Good practice in Australia and New Zealand is to inspect these hoses at every service once the vehicle is getting on in years, and to plan replacement around the 6–10 year or 100,000–150,000 km mark, sooner if there are signs of ageing or oil contamination. When it’s time, replace the pair (feed and return) together, fit quality clamps, and refill with the Nissan-specified long-life coolant. Always bleed the cooling system properly and confirm strong cabin heat with no sweet coolant smell inside.
- What to look for: soft spots, swelling, cracking, glazing, bulges near clamps, crusty deposits, or dampness.
- Common causes of early failure: old coolant, oil contamination from leaks, overtightened worm-drive clamps, and high under-bonnet temps.
- Work on a stone-cold engine