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Parts for your 2008 Toyota Corolla-Oil seals
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2008 Toyota Corolla oil seals: what they do and when to replace them
Based on Toyota’s repair manuals for the E140-series Corolla (including ZRE152/ZZE152 variants) and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue, oil seals are absolutely relevant on a 2008 Toyota Corolla. The car uses multiple oil seals: front and rear crankshaft oil seals, transaxle/driveshaft output oil seals, and various radial lip seals around the timing cover and oil pump. These are factory-fitted components designed to keep engine oil and transmission fluid where they belong, and they’re serviceable parts when leakage occurs.
The purpose of these oil seals is simple but critical. They keep pressurised oil inside the engine and gearbox while allowing rotating shafts to spin freely. A good seal maintains oil pressure, prevents drips on your driveway, and protects belts, clutches, and rubber bushes from oil contamination. On the 1.8‑litre Corolla engines of this era, the front crank seal sits behind the crank pulley at the timing cover, while the rear main seal sits between engine and gearbox. The transaxle uses lip seals where each CV shaft enters the housing.
Oil seals don’t have a fixed replacement interval