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Parts for your 2011 Toyota Blade-Clutch kit
2011 Toyota Blade clutch-kit — does this vehicle use one?
Short answer: a traditional clutch-kit isn’t used on the 2011 Toyota Blade. Technical references including Toyota’s Japanese‑market sales literature, the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC), and Toyota service publications (Repair Manual and New Car Features for the Blade) show the Blade was offered with a CVT on the 2.4‑litre model and a 6‑speed automatic on the 3.5‑litre V6 “Blade Master”. No manual transmission variant was factory‑fitted, so there’s no conventional clutch assembly (friction disc, pressure plate, release bearing) to replace.
Why there’s no clutch-kit: the Blade’s transmissions use different hardware to do the job of a manual clutch. The CVT uses a belt‑and‑pulley system with a torque converter or start‑up clutch inside the transmission, and the 6‑speed auto uses a torque converter and internal multi‑plate clutch packs immersed in fluid. These components aren’t serviced as an external “clutch-kit”, and when they wear, repairs are internal transmission work rather than a driveway clutch swap.
Owners hunting for a “2011 Toyota Blade clutch-kit” are usually crossing over info from Corolla/Auris manuals of similar shape. The Blade’s drivetrain is a different kettle of fish. The smarter play for longevity is routine transmission care, not clutch replacement.
- Stick to the correct Toyota ATF/CVT fluid and change intervals appropriate for local conditions. Many workshops in Australia and New Zealand recommend more frequent changes if the car tows, commutes in heavy traffic, or sees hot climates.
- Ask for a pan inspection where applicable: look for debris, check the strainer or filter, and reseal properly.
- Keep software up to date where possible