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Parts for your 2009 Toyota Fortuner-Thermostat

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2009 Toyota Fortuner Thermostat

Based on Toyota’s technical sources, the 2009 Toyota Fortuner is fitted with a conventional wax‑pellet engine coolant thermostat. The Toyota Repair Manual for the AN60‑series Fortuner/HiLux (Cooling – Thermostat section) specifies removal/installation and testing procedures for the water thermostat, and Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue lists a thermostat for all common 2009 Fortuner engines (1KD‑FTV 3.0 D‑4D, 2KD‑FTV 2.5 D‑4D, 2TR‑FE 2.7 petrol, and 1GR‑FE 4.0 V6), with typical part references such as 90916‑03093 (82°C spec) and the matching seal. That confirms the thermostat is relevant and used on this model.

The thermostat in a 2009 Fortuner quietly does the heavy lifting to keep the engine at its sweet spot. By staying closed when the engine’s cold, it helps the Fortuner warm up quickly, reducing wear and cutting fuel use. Once coolant reaches about the low‑80s °C, it begins to open and meters flow to the radiator so the engine holds a stable operating temperature for good performance, efficient combustion, and decent cabin heat on chilly mornings. If it sticks shut, the temp can spike, if it sticks open, the engine can run cool, chew through fuel, and feel a bit doughy.

Thermostats aren’t a routine “every‑X‑kilometres” replacement on these Toyotas, but they’re absolutely worth checking any time the cooling system is serviced. When doing coolant changes (using Toyota Super Long Life Coolant mixed correctly), a water pump, radiator, or hose job, it’s smart to inspect or test the thermostat and replace the seal. On older, high‑kilometre Fortuners, many owners choose to proactively fit a genuine‑spec thermostat to avoid dramas on a long trip.

  • Common clues it’s on the way out: slow warm‑up, fluctuating temp gauge, overheating under load, poor heater performance, or the electric fans running more than usual.
  • When replacing: note the jiggle valve orientation (usually at the top), fit a new O‑ring/gasket, clean the mating surfaces, and tighten housing bolts to the correct torque.
  • After refilling: bleed the system properly, run the engine to operating temp, and confirm the upper hose warms evenly as the thermostat opens.

Stick with an OEM‑quality thermostat matched to the engine’s specified opening temperature (commonly 82°C on diesel and many petrol variants). Pair it with a good radiator cap and fresh coolant, and the Fortuner’s cooling system will stay happy across Aussie heat and Kiwi alpine runs.

What temperature does the 2009 Fortuner thermostat open at?

Most 2009 Fortuner engines use an 82°C‑rated thermostat. It typically starts to open around 82°C and is fully open in the mid‑90s°C range. The exact spec varies by engine, so matching the engine code (1KD‑FTV, 2KD‑FTV, 2TR‑FE, or 1GR‑FE) to the correct part is the go.

Where is the thermostat located on a 2009 Fortuner?

It’s housed in the water inlet/thermostat housing at the engine end of a main radiator hose. On 1KD/2KD diesels it’s usually at the lower hose outlet on the engine side, on 2TR‑FE and 1GR‑FE petrols it’s positioned near the front of the engine. Follow the hose to the alloy housing with a couple of bolts—that’s the spot.

Should the thermostat be replaced during routine servicing?

It’s not a scheduled replacement item, but it’s wise to test or replace it when tackling cooling system work (coolant change, water pump, radiator, or if there are temp‑related symptoms). On high‑kilometre or 10+‑year‑old vehicles, a preventative replacement with a genuine‑spec unit is inexpensive peace of mind.

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