Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 2012 Daihatsu Bego-Thermostat housing
Explore 4WD & Adventure
2012 Daihatsu Bego Thermostat Housing — What It Does and How to Look After It
Technical references confirm a thermostat housing is definitely fitted to the 2012 Daihatsu Bego. The Daihatsu J200-series Service Manual (Terios/Bego, Cooling System section), the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for the J200E/J210E Rush twin, and Daihatsu Genuine Parts catalogues all show a thermostat mounted within a water inlet/outlet assembly commonly referred to as the thermostat housing. On the 1.5-litre 3SZ-VE engine used in 2012 Bego models (and the related K3-VE in some markets), the housing bolts to the engine and connects to the radiator hose, retaining the thermostat and sealing the coolant passages.
For this Bego, the thermostat housing’s job is to hold the thermostat in exactly the right spot so coolant flow can be regulated as the engine warms up. It’s also the junction where the radiator hose attaches, and it seals the system with a gasket or O-ring. By keeping coolant flow under control, it helps the engine reach and maintain its ideal operating temperature, improves heater performance, and protects against overheating or running too cool.
While there’s no strict replacement interval, many workshops in Australia and New Zealand recommend inspecting the housing any time the cooling system is serviced, and considering replacement of the thermostat and gasket around 100,000–150,000 km or 8–10 years, or earlier if there are issues. Typical red flags include coolant weeping around the housing, temperature gauge bouncing around, slow warm-up, poor cabin heat, or overheating under load. Corrosion, pitting, or a warped sealing face are all good reasons to swap the housing. On these engines, the thermostat is commonly an 82°C unit