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Parts for your 2010 Toyota Blade-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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Castrol Radicool P-OAT Purple Coolant Premix 5L - 3431624
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2010 Toyota Blade radiator: what it does and how to look after it
A radiator is absolutely relevant and fitted to the 2010 Toyota Blade. The model sits on Toyota’s E150 platform (Auris/Corolla-based) and was offered with the 2.4‑litre 2AZ‑FE or the 3.5‑litre 2GR‑FE petrol engines. Both engines are liquid‑cooled and specified with a front‑mounted aluminium radiator, coolant reservoir and twin electric fans. This is documented in Toyota service literature (Cooling System section) and shown in the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) for E150 Blade variants (e.g., AZE154H, GRE156H). New Car Features (NCF) materials for these engines also describe the cross‑flow radiator and electric fan control strategy used on the Blade.
The radiator on a 2010 Toyota Blade does the heavy lifting of shedding heat from the engine coolant so the car runs at a stable temperature, even on a blazing Aussie or Kiwi summer day. Coolant circulates through the engine, picks up heat, then passes through the radiator’s cores where it’s cooled by airflow and the electric fans. Keeping this system in top nick protects head gaskets, alloy components and transmission coolers that may share the radiator tanks on some auto/CVT versions.
- Use the right coolant: Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink) or an equivalent that explicitly meets Toyota’s spec. Mixing types or using universal green can cause corrosion and gel‑up.
- Service intervals: Toyota’s SLLC typically runs up to about 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then about every 80,000 km or 5 years thereafter. Many owners in AU/NZ choose earlier changes if towing or driving in hot conditions.
- Checks at each service:
- Look for pink crusting or damp patches around end tanks, hose joints and the radiator cap.
- Inspect fins for damage or bugs and seeds clogging airflow, rinse gently with low‑pressure water.
- Confirm the fans stage on and off normally when up to temp or with A/C on.
- Squeeze hoses for softness, swelling or cracks, replace ageing clamps.
- Replacement tips: There’s no fixed “change the radiator” interval, replace if it’s leaking, corroded, clogged or the plastic tanks are going brittle. When swapping, use new hoses/clamps, and if the car is auto/CVT, cap and reconnect any transmission cooler lines carefully to avoid cross‑contamination.
- Bleeding air: Refill slowly, run the heater on hot, and bleed air per Toyota procedure. A vacuum fill tool is ideal. Watch the temp gauge, if it spikes, shut down and re‑bleed.
A healthy radiator keeps the Blade happy on the open road and in city traffic, reduces the chance of pricey engine repairs, and helps the A/C and transmission perform as they should.
What coolant should a 2010 Toyota Blade use?
Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink) or an exact equivalent is the go. It’s formulated for the alloy components and seals used in the Blade’s cooling system. Stick with the correct type and maintain a proper mix ratio, avoid topping up with water alone unless it’s an emergency.
How often should the radiator and coolant be serviced?
Coolant service is typically at about 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then about every 80,000 km or 5 years. In hotter climates, heavy traffic or towing, more frequent changes are cheap insurance. The radiator itself isn’t a scheduled replacement item, but should be replaced if there’s leakage, clogging, damaged fins or brittle plastic tanks.
Is the Blade radiator the same as a Corolla/Auris one?
The Blade shares its E150 platform with the Auris/Corolla, so many parts look similar, but radiators vary by engine and transmission. The V6 Blade Master and 2.4‑litre models can use different cores, tanks and cooler fittings. Always match by VIN, engine code and transmission type before ordering.