Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Show More Show Less

Price

Parts for your 2010 Toyota Crown-Radiator

Sort by

Explore 4WD & Adventure

Rislone Head Gasket Fix 680g - 41111
30%OFF

Rislone Head Gasket Fix 680g - 41111

$70
$101
Fitment Notes:
See More
Armor All Windscreen Wash 500ml - AUSGLCB-500-1ANZ

Armor All Windscreen Wash 500ml - AUSGLCB-500-1ANZ

$7
Fitment Notes:
See More
GV Demineralised Water 5L - DEMIN-05L

GV Demineralised Water 5L - DEMIN-05L

$12
Fitment Notes:
See More
Nulon Permanent Head Gasket Repair 750ml - PHGR-750

Nulon Permanent Head Gasket Repair 750ml - PHGR-750

$98
Fitment Notes:
See More
Rislone Rear Main Seal Repair 500ml - 44240

Rislone Rear Main Seal Repair 500ml - 44240

$38
Fitment Notes:
See More
Nulon Pro-Strength Diesel Turbo Cleaner 500ml - PDTC

Nulon Pro-Strength Diesel Turbo Cleaner 500ml - PDTC

$46
Fitment Notes:
See More
Repco Cooling System Flush 300ml

Repco Cooling System Flush 300ml

$16
Fitment Notes:
See More
K-SEAL Ultimate Head Gasket Repair - K3501

K-SEAL Ultimate Head Gasket Repair - K3501

$102
Fitment Notes:
See More
Nulon Gearbox Treatment 125ml - G70
Clearance

Nulon Gearbox Treatment 125ml - G70

$6
Fitment Notes:
See More
Rislone Aluminium Radiator Stop Leak 479g - 41186

Rislone Aluminium Radiator Stop Leak 479g - 41186

$32
Fitment Notes:
See More
Rislone Engine Treatment Concentrate 500ml - 44102

Rislone Engine Treatment Concentrate 500ml - 44102

$23
Fitment Notes:
See More
Proma MBL8 Oil Concentrate 250ml - 50083

Proma MBL8 Oil Concentrate 250ml - 50083

$80
Fitment Notes:
See More
Repco 3 Pc Hose Pinching Pliers Set - RST234

Repco 3 Pc Hose Pinching Pliers Set - RST234

$44
Fitment Notes:
See More
One Shot Radiator Stop Leak - 20050

One Shot Radiator Stop Leak - 20050

$9
Fitment Notes:
See More
Lubegard Shudder Fix 60ML - 19610

Lubegard Shudder Fix 60ML - 19610

$30
Fitment Notes:
See More
Lucas Heavy Duty Oil Stabilizer 946ml - 10001

Lucas Heavy Duty Oil Stabilizer 946ml - 10001

$40
Fitment Notes:
See More
Showing 1 - 39 of 110 products

2010 Toyota Crown radiator — purpose, service and replacement

Yes, the 2010 Toyota Crown absolutely uses a radiator. Toyota’s own technical literature — including the Crown S200 New Car Features manual and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue — lists the radiator assembly for the petrol V6 and hybrid variants. Denso’s OEM service data also details the coolant circuit and heat exchanger layout, confirming the part is standard kit on this model.

The radiator’s job on a 2010 Toyota Crown is to shed engine heat so the V6 (or hybrid’s petrol engine) can stay in its sweet spot for performance, efficiency and longevity. Coolant circulates through the block and heads, then passes through the radiator core where air flow strips away heat. On some trims, the radiator tank includes a built‑in transmission fluid cooler, and hybrid models add separate heat exchangers for the inverter/e‑motor system alongside the main engine radiator.

For servicing, coolant choice and intervals matter. This model is designed for Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (the pink premix). The typical Toyota schedule is an initial change at around 160,000 km or 10 years, then every 80,000 km or 5 years thereafter. In Australian and New Zealand conditions — with big temperature swings and plenty of stop‑start — many workshops prefer testing coolant condition annually and replacing earlier if the inhibitor package is depleted. Stick with premix or use demineralised water if topping up concentrate to avoid scale.

Replacement is on the cards if there’s repeated overheating, visible fin corrosion, leaks at the plastic tanks, sludge from mixed coolants, or any cross‑contamination with ATF on autos that use the in‑tank cooler. If the radiator’s original and the Crown is nudging high kilometres, a preventative replacement during a major service can be smart insurance.

  • Inspect every service: check for damp spots, white/pink residue, cracked tanks, soft hoses, and a weak or damaged cap.
  • Flush properly: drain, refill with distilled water, run to temperature, drain again, then refill with the correct premix. Bleed air at the designated ports and run the heater to purge bubbles.
  • Mind the fans and thermostat: a good radiator can’t compensate for a lazy fan clutch, failed fan motor, or sticky thermostat.
  • Protect the core: clean bugs and debris gently from the fins, avoid high‑pressure blasts that fold them over.
  • Dispose responsibly: used coolant is toxic — send it to a proper recycling stream.

Look after the radiator and the Crown will handle hot Aussie summers and cool Kiwi mornings without breaking a sweat.

Q: What coolant does a 2010 Toyota Crown use, and how often should it be changed?

This model is designed for Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink). Use the premix or, if using concentrate, only mix with demineralised water.

Typical guidance is an initial change at about 160,000 km or 10 years, then every 80,000 km or 5 years. Many local workshops test annually and may change earlier based on condition and climate.

Q: How can someone tell the radiator needs replacing rather than just a flush?

If there are external leaks, cracked plastic end tanks, heavily corroded fins, persistent overheating despite a proper flush, or oily/transmission fluid contamination in the coolant (on autos with an in‑tank cooler), replacement is the safer bet.

A flush helps when coolant is old but the core is sound. Pressure‑test the system, check the cap, thermostat and fans, and inspect with a torch, those findings guide the decision.

Q: Is the Crown Hybrid’s radiator different from the regular V6 version?

The hybrid still uses a conventional engine radiator for the petrol engine, similar in function to the V6 units, but the vehicle also carries separate cooling components for the hybrid system (e.g., inverter/e‑motor loop).

When ordering or servicing, match parts by VIN to ensure the correct radiator and any auxiliary heat exchangers are accounted for.

{ "@context": "https://schema.org", "@type": "FAQPage", "mainEntity": [ { "@type": "Question", "name": "What coolant does a 2010 Toyota Crown use, and how often should it be changed?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "This model is designed for Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink). Use the premix or, if using concentrate, only mix with demineralised water. Typical guidance is an initial change at about 160,000 km or 10 years, then every 80,000 km or 5 years. Many local workshops test annually and may change earlier based on condition and climate." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "How can someone tell the radiator needs replacing rather than just a flush?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "If there are external leaks, cracked plastic end tanks, heavily corroded fins, persistent overheating despite a proper flush, or oily/transmission fluid contamination in the coolant (on autos with an in-tank cooler), replacement is the safer bet. A flush helps when coolant is old but the core is sound. Pressure-test the system, check the cap, thermostat and fans, and inspect with a torch, those findings guide the decision." } }, { "@type": "Question", "name": "Is the Crown Hybrid’s radiator different from the regular V6 version?", "acceptedAnswer": { "@type": "Answer", "text": "The hybrid still uses a conventional engine radiator for the petrol engine, similar in function to the V6 units, but the vehicle also carries separate cooling components for the hybrid system (e.g., inverter/e-motor loop). When ordering or servicing, match parts by VIN to ensure the correct radiator and any auxiliary heat exchangers are accounted for." } } ]}