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Parts for your 2011 Toyota Crown-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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2011 Toyota Crown Radiator — what it does and how to look after it
Yes, the 2011 Toyota Crown absolutely uses a radiator. Factory service information and Toyota parts catalogues for the S200-series Crown (including Athlete, Royal and Hybrid variants) specify a front-mounted aluminium radiator as part of the engine’s liquid-cooling system. With petrol and hybrid drivetrains on offer, there’s no fully electric variant in this year that would skip a conventional radiator.
The radiator’s job is straightforward but critical: it sheds the engine’s heat by circulating coolant through thin tubes and fins, then dumping that heat into the airstream. Engine-driven or electric fans pull air across the core at low speeds, while at highway pace the grille airflow does the heavy lifting. This keeps temps steady, protects the head gasket, and helps the auto trans and inverter (on hybrids with integrated coolers) stay in their happy zone.
For a 2011 Crown, the right coolant is Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink), pre-mixed. It resists corrosion in the alloy radiator and protects the water pump. Mixed or off-spec coolant can cause scale build-up, electrolysis, and poor heat transfer.
Good servicing habits go a long way. If the temperature gauge creeps up, the heater blows cold under load, or you spot pinkish crust around the tanks or end seams, that’s the car asking for attention. Sweet smells, a low overflow bottle, and discoloured coolant are other tell-tales.
When replacing a tired radiator, it’s smart to treat the whole cooling system as a team job. Fresh coolant, a new cap, and any soft or swollen hoses are inexpensive insurance. Bleeding air correctly (using the bleed points and heater on full hot) prevents hot spots and fluctuating temps.
- Change coolant roughly every 5 years or 100,000 km, or sooner if contaminated.
- Inspect hoses, clamps, and the cap at each service, replace if cracked, hard, or weeping.
- Check for debris in the grille and condenser, gently hose fins from the engine side outward.
- Confirm fans cut in with A/C on, sluggish fans can mimic a failing radiator.
- If the old coolant is rusty or oily, investigate for head gasket or trans cooler issues before refitting.
A quality OEM-spec aluminium core with plastic tanks is the right fitment for most 2011 Crowns. With proper coolant and clean airflow, the radiator will clock up the kilometres without fuss.
Popular questions about the 2011 Toyota Crown radiator
What coolant should be used in a 2011 Toyota Crown radiator?
Use Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink), which comes pre-mixed and ready to pour. It’s formulated to protect aluminium components and maintain the correct corrosion package for Toyota systems.
Avoid mixing colours or brands. If switching types, do a thorough flush first so the inhibitors don’t clash and form gel or scale that can block the core.
How often should the coolant be changed on a 2011 Crown?
Plan on every 5 years or about 100,000 km under normal Aussie/NZ conditions, or sooner if the coolant looks dirty, the system’s been opened, or you’ve had an overheating event.
Regular changes maintain corrosion protection and keep the water pump and thermostat happy, extending the life of the radiator and allied parts.
What are common signs the radiator needs replacement?
Persistent overheating at speed, visible leaks or pink crust at the end tanks, swelling or separation at the plastic-to-core seam, and repeated low coolant with no obvious hose leak are classic signs.
Also watch for clogged fins (bugs, grass seeds), discoloured coolant, or poor heater performance under load. If in doubt, pressure-test the system and check fan operation before condemning the core.