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Parts for your 2009 Toyota Vitz|yaris-Oil pump
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2009 Toyota Vitz/Yaris Oil Pump — What It Does and When It Needs Attention
Yes, the 2009 Toyota Vitz/Yaris (XP90) absolutely uses an engine-driven oil pump. Technical sources including the Toyota Repair Manual for the XP90 series, Toyota’s New Car Features documentation, the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) listing an “Oil Pump Assy” for 1KR‑FE, 2SZ‑FE and 1NZ‑FE engines, and independent manuals such as Haynes/Autodata all confirm a trochoid/gerotor-style oil pump mounted in the timing chain cover and driven by the crankshaft. That pump circulates engine oil under pressure through bearings, camshafts and the timing hardware, and regulates pressure via an internal relief valve.
For everyday driving across Australia and New Zealand, that pump is the quiet achiever, keeping the 1.0, 1.3 or 1.5-litre engines happy for big kilometres. Its job is to pick up oil from the sump via the strainer, pressurise it, and feed it through the galleries to prevent metal-to-metal contact and carry heat away. When it’s doing its thing, bearings last, timing chains stay nicely lubricated and the engine stays quiet on cold starts.
Owners won’t normally replace an oil pump as a routine service item. Instead, look after it indirectly with regular oil and filter changes using the correct viscosity and an OEM-quality filter. Sludge is the enemy, clean oil is the best protection. If the engine has suffered severe sludge or the oil light flickers at idle when hot, it’s time for a proper check with a mechanical pressure gauge and, if needed, the sump and pickup removal to inspect the strainer.
- Common warning signs: low oil pressure warning, light rattling on cold start that doesn’t settle, or persistent bearing noise.
- Recommended checks: oil pressure test, inspect for leaks, verify oil level/grade, and assess timing cover area for seepage.
- Replacement considerations: on the XP90 engines the pump lives in or on the timing chain cover, replacement typically involves front cover removal, careful sealant use, and new gaskets/O-rings, plus checking the pickup strainer and the pressure relief valve.
If a pump is replaced, it’s smart to fit a new crank seal, refresh sealant on the timing cover, and clean the sump and pickup. Quality parts and factory procedures pay off here, that pump is vital to the engine’s long-term reliability.
Popular questions about 2009 Toyota Vitz/Yaris oil pumps
Does the 2009 Vitz/Yaris actually have an oil pump?
The 2009 model definitely has a mechanical oil pump. Toyota’s XP90 repair information and the EPC list an Oil Pump Assembly for the 1KR‑FE, 2SZ‑FE and 1NZ‑FE engines, describing a trochoid/gerotor pump driven straight off the crankshaft.
When should the oil pump be replaced?
It’s not a scheduled item. It gets replaced if verified low oil pressure is present, the pickup is blocked, the relief valve is sticking, or the pump shows excessive wear during an engine repair. Always confirm pressure with a gauge before authorising big work.
How big a job is an oil pump on the XP90?
It’s a moderate-to-major job because the pump is integrated with the timing cover area. Expect front-end disassembly, timing cover removal, sealant work and re-timing checks. Labour time varies by engine and workshop, so getting a quote is wise.