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Parts for your 2012 Toyota Crown-Radiator
Nulon Pro-Strength Extreme Cooling System Flush & Degreaser 500ml - PSCSF
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
Loctite 620 High Strength High Temp Retaining Compound 50ml - 235288
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2012 Toyota Crown Radiator — What It Does and How To Look After It
Yes, the 2012 Toyota Crown uses a radiator. Toyota’s own technical literature for the S200/S210-series Crown (covering 2010–2012) — including the Toyota Repair Manual/GSIC and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue — lists a radiator assembly (PNC 16400) and related cooling components for the 4GR‑FSE and 2GR‑FSE V6 engines, and the 2AR‑FSE hybrid variant. That makes the radiator a core part of the car’s liquid-cooled engine system, not an optional extra.
On this model, the radiator’s job is to dump engine heat into the air so the Crown runs at the right temperature, whether it’s a hybrid cruising quietly or a V6 stretching its legs on a hot Aussie or Kiwi afternoon. Coolant flows from the engine through the radiator’s thin tubes and fins, the fans pull air through, and heat is shed efficiently so the ECU can hold a steady operating temp for performance, economy, and longevity.
For everyday servicing, a few easy checks keep a 2012 Crown’s radiator happy and healthy. It’s worth a peek any time the bonnet’s up, and definitely at scheduled intervals or before long trips.
- Coolant: Use Toyota Genuine Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premixed). Top up only when the engine is cold.
- Intervals: Factory fill is long-life, after the first major interval, plan coolant replacement about every 80,000 km or 5 years (use the owner’s manual for your exact schedule).
- Visual checks: Look for crusty pink residue, damp spots, bent fins, or stone damage. Check the cap seal and spring — a tired cap can cause boil-over.
- Hoses and clamps: Feel for soft spots, swelling, or cracks. Replace aged hoses and use quality clamps.
- Fans and shroud: Make sure electric fans spin freely and the shroud is secure for proper airflow.
Thinking about replacement? Let the engine cool right down, drain the coolant cleanly for recycling, and remove the fan shroud. Disconnect upper and lower hoses and, if fitted, any transmission cooler lines — cap them to avoid drips. Unbolt the radiator, lift it straight up, and transfer any cushions, mounts, or sensors to the new unit. Refit carefully, torque mounts to spec, and refill with the correct pink SLLC. Bleed the system with the heater on, keep an eye on the level, and check for leaks under pressure.
Hot climates, steep climbs, towing, or city slogging can all work a radiator hard. If the Crown starts running hotter than usual, the heater blows cool at idle, or there’s a sweet coolant whiff after parking, it’s time for a proper inspection. A good, clean radiator lets the Crown do what it does best — glide along smoothly without breaking a sweat.
Popular questions
What coolant should be used in a 2012 Toyota Crown radiator?
Use Toyota Genuine Super Long Life Coolant (SLLC), the pink premix. It’s designed for the alloy components and seals in Toyota cooling systems and provides long-life corrosion protection.
If you’re topping up, stick with the same pink SLLC to avoid mixing types. If the history is unknown or fluids have been mixed, a full drain and refill is the safest play.
How often should the radiator coolant be changed on a 2012 Toyota Crown?
After the initial factory fill interval, plan on replacing coolant roughly every 80,000 kilometres or 5 years. Always check the owner’s manual for the exact schedule that matches the engine variant.
Severe service — high heat, frequent short trips, heavy loads — may justify shorter intervals. Clean coolant keeps temps stable and protects water pumps, heater cores, and the radiator itself.
What are signs the radiator needs replacement on a 2012 Toyota Crown?
Watch for persistent overheating, visible leaks or pink crust around end tanks, stained fins, swelling plastic tanks, or repeated low-coolant warnings. A cooling fan running constantly can also hint at weak heat rejection.
If a pressure test drops quickly or the core is externally damaged and can’t be combed or cleaned, replacement is usually the most reliable fix.