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Parts for your 2009 Toyota Hilux-Radiator
Nulon Pro-Strength Extreme Cooling System Flush & Degreaser 500ml - PSCSF
Fitment Notes:
Explore 4WD & Adventure
Loctite 620 High Strength High Temp Retaining Compound 50ml - 235288
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FloKool Radiator Engine Cooling Aluminium Core Plastic Tank - RAD1485
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FloKool Radiator Engine Cooling Aluminium Core Plastic Tank - RAD1486
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2009 Toyota HiLux Radiator — Purpose, Maintenance, and Replacement
Based on technical sources such as the Toyota HiLux Owner’s Manual (2009 model year), the Toyota HiLux N70 Series Repair Manual (Cooling System section), and Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue (which lists radiator assemblies for the 1KD-FTV diesel and 1TR-FE/1GR-FE petrol variants), the 2009 Toyota HiLux is fitted with a conventional liquid-cooling radiator. It’s a core part of the ute’s engine cooling system and absolutely relevant to servicing and reliability.
The radiator’s job is straightforward: circulate coolant through the engine, pull heat out via the radiator core, and keep operating temps in the sweet spot. That control protects head gaskets, turbos on the diesel variants, and keeps oil and transmission temps happier when towing, touring, or crawling through beach sand across Australia and New Zealand.
For owners, good radiator care is cheap insurance. Stick with Toyota-approved coolant (commonly Toyota Super Long Life Coolant, pink) and follow the service book for change intervals. In real-world use, many shops in AU/NZ recommend coolant service around every 80,000–100,000 kilometres or five years, earlier if you’re towing, working the vehicle hard, or seeing rusty or sludgy coolant. Always avoid mixing coolant types and top up with the correct premix ratio specified on the bottle or in the manual.
When replacing, go for an OE-equivalent alloy core with plastic end tanks, check the radiator cap rating matches the spec on the cap/owner’s guide, and pressure-test after installation. Bleed the system properly (heater on, engine at operating temp) to purge air pockets. On automatic models, the radiator often houses an in-tank transmission cooler—inspect ATF lines and consider a separate cooler if you’re regularly towing heavy loads.
- Watch for tell-tales: rising temps under load, coolant smell, pink/white crust at tank seams, mud-packed fins, or ATF contamination (strawberry milkshake look) in the coolant.
- Clean fins gently from the engine side out with low-pressure water, avoid bending fins with a pressure washer.
- Inspect hoses, clamps, thermostat, fan clutch, water pump, and the cap whenever the radiator is serviced.
If overheating is intermittent, a partially blocked core or clogged fins might be the culprit. A quick infrared temperature scan across the core can reveal cold spots that point to internal blockage.
Popular questions about the 2009toyotahilux radiator
What coolant should a 2009 Toyota HiLux use, and how much does it hold?
Use Toyota-approved coolant, commonly Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink) premixed. Capacity varies by engine and transmission, but expect roughly 9–12 litres across 2009 HiLux variants. Always confirm the exact specification and fill volume in the owner’s manual or service information for your specific engine and gearbox.
If you’re flushing the system, capture and dispose of old coolant responsibly, and bleed air from the system after refill to prevent hot spots and heater issues.
How often should the coolant be changed?
Follow the service schedule in the owner’s book. Many workshops recommend every 80,000–100,000 kilometres or five years with genuine SLLC, sooner if the vehicle tows, works off-road, or the coolant shows discolouration. Never mix coolant types, if unsure what’s in the system, a full flush and refill with the correct product is the safest move.
Regular level checks and a look at the coolant colour (clear, bright pink/red, no debris) help catch problems early.
Why does my HiLux overheat only at highway speeds?
Restricted coolant flow or blocked radiator fins can show up at higher loads and speeds. A weak radiator cap, a marginal fan clutch (for viscous setups), a sticky thermostat, or debris between the A/C condenser and radiator can also cause high-speed overheating.
Inspect the front stack, clean the fins gently, check for cold spots across the core with an infrared thermometer, and pressure-test the cap and system to confirm the root cause.