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Parts for your 2011 Toyota Crown-Water pump

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Penrite Radiator Flush Additive 375mL - ADRF375

Penrite Radiator Flush Additive 375mL - ADRF375

$27
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Mechpro Multi-Use Fuel Siphon Pump Transfer Kit

Mechpro Multi-Use Fuel Siphon Pump Transfer Kit

$22
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OEX Water Pump - WP4059X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP4059X

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$128
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OEX Water Pump - WP9000X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP9000X

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$121
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OEX Water Pump - WP8308X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP8308X

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$181
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Explore 4WD & Adventure

OEX Water Pump - WP8265X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP8265X

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$105
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OEX Water Pump - WP4130X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP4130X

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$360
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OEX Water Pump - WP8123X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP8123X

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$154
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OEX Water Pump - WP8481X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP8481X

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$275
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OEX Water Pump - WP3053X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP3053X

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$98
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Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - WP158

Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - WP158

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$14
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OEX Water Pump - WP8295X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP8295X

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$112
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OEX Water Pump - WP1000X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP1000X

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$122
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OEX Water Pump - WP9001X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP9001X

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$551
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Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - LS401

Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - LS401

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$11
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Mechpro Battery Operated Electric Siphon Pump - MBESP

Mechpro Battery Operated Electric Siphon Pump - MBESP

$17
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OEX Water Pump - WP8472X
OEX

OEX Water Pump - WP8472X

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$164
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Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - WP114

Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - WP114

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$48
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Karcher G3200 Petrol Water Blaster - 1.194-040.0

Karcher G3200 Petrol Water Blaster - 1.194-040.0

$1,049
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Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - WP112

Permaseal Water Pump Gasket - WP112

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$15
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Showing 1 - 39 of 1623 products

2011 Toyota Crown water pump — what it does and when to sort it

Based on Toyota’s technical literature and parts catalogues, the 2011 Toyota Crown absolutely uses a water pump. The Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for the S200-series Crown (2008–2012) lists a “Water Pump Assembly” across the common GR-family engines (4GR‑FSE 2.5L, 3GR‑FSE 3.0L, 2GR‑FSE/FXE 3.5L). Toyota GR engine repair manuals include full procedures under Cooling: Water Pump: Removal/Installation. Even the Hybrid variant retains an engine water pump, with an additional electric auxiliary pump for heater flow. So the water pump is very much relevant on this model.

On a 2011 Toyota Crown, the water pump is the heart of the cooling system. It circulates coolant through the block, heads, radiator and heater core, keeping temperatures steady, preventing hot spots, and helping the V6 run sweet as under Aussie and Kiwi conditions. Healthy flow protects head gaskets, keeps the cabin heater happy, and supports fuel economy by holding the engine in its ideal temperature window.

There’s no fixed “change-by” kilometre rule from Toyota because the Crown’s GR engines run a timing chain and an external, belt-driven pump. Most last well beyond 150,000 km, but they’re a wear item. Good servicing keeps them out of trouble.

  • What to watch for under the bonnet:
    • Pink/white crust or dampness around the pump body or weep hole
    • Sweet coolant smell after parking, or low coolant level
    • Chirping/whirring from the pump area, wobble at the pulley, or overheating

Best practice at service time (every 10,000–15,000 km): inspect the serpentine belt and tensioner, check for any play at the pump pulley, look for staining tracks, and test coolant quality. Use Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink) premix to the spec in the owner’s book. If the pump shows seepage, noise or bearing play, organise a replacement rather than nursing it along.

Replacing the pump is a straight, spanner-friendly job for a technician: drain coolant, remove the drive belt and pump, clean the mating face, then fit a quality OE or OE‑equivalent (Aisin supplies many Toyota pumps). Always replace the gasket/O‑ring, and it’s smart to do the thermostat and belt while you’re in there. Refill with the correct coolant and bleed thoroughly to avoid airlocks, run the heater to purge the core. On Hybrid Crowns, follow the correct bleed procedure as there can be an electric auxiliary pump to consider.

A tidy water pump keeps the Crown cool on long motorway runs and summer city traffic alike. Stay on top of inspections, and when the first signs of wear pop up, swap it before it strands you.

How often should a 2011 Toyota Crown water pump be replaced?

There’s no fixed interval. Many last 120,000–200,000 km or more, so it’s replaced on condition. If there’s seepage at the weep hole, bearing noise, pulley wobble, or overheating, it’s time.

Have it checked at each regular service. If you’re changing the serpentine belt or thermostat, it’s a handy time to assess and, if needed, replace the pump to save duplicated labour.

Is it safe to drive with a leaking water pump?

Not really. A small seep can turn into a big leak without much warning. Coolant loss or sudden bearing failure can overheat the engine and do expensive damage.

If you spot drips or smell coolant, keep trips short and monitor the level, or better yet, book it straight in. Overheating even once can cook gaskets and plastic fittings.

What coolant should the Crown use after a water pump change?

Use Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink) premix that meets Toyota’s spec. It’s designed to protect alloy components and the pump seals used in GR engines.

Refill capacity varies by engine and spec, so follow the owner’s manual or workshop guide, bleed the system properly, and recheck the level over the next couple of heat cycles.