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Parts for your 2011 Nissan Pulsar-Oil pump
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2011 Nissan Pulsar Oil Pump: What it does and how to look after it
Yes, the 2011 Nissan Pulsar uses an engine oil pump. Technical references back this up: Nissan factory service manuals for the Tiida/Pulsar platform (C11/N17/B17) describe a crankshaft-driven trochoid oil pump integrated with the front cover on engines commonly seen around 2011 in ANZ markets (MR18DE/HR16DE in Tiida, and later MRA8DE/MR16DDT in Pulsar). Nissan’s FAST parts catalogue lists a dedicated oil pump assembly and pickup for these engines, and mainstream workshop data (Autodata/Haynes) includes oil pressure specs and oil pump service procedures. Even where the model badge differed (many 2011 ANZ cars were sold as Tiida but are Pulsar-equivalent), the underlying engines all run a mechanical oil pump.
The oil pump’s job is simple but critical: it draws oil from the sump, pushes it through the filter, and feeds pressurised oil to bearings, camshafts, and the timing chain system. On a 2011 Pulsar, healthy oil pressure keeps the engine quiet, reduces wear, and helps the chain tensioner do its thing. It’s not a routine “replace at X km” item, but it absolutely relies on correct servicing.
Good habits to keep the pump happy include using the right spec oil (typically 5W-30 meeting the manufacturer’s spec), a quality filter with a proper anti-drainback valve, and sticking to service intervals around every 10,000 km or 12 months in Aussie and Kiwi conditions. Sludge is the pump’s enemy