Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Part Location

Price

Parts for your 2013 Holden Captiva 5-Heater hose

Sort by
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 products

2013 Holden Captiva 5 Heater Hose — What It Does and How to Look After It

Based on Holden’s Electronic Parts Catalogue for CG Series II and GM Service Information (SI) for the Captiva/Antara platform HVAC and Cooling sections, the 2013 Holden Captiva 5 is fitted with dedicated heater inlet and outlet hoses that carry engine coolant to and from the heater core at the firewall. That makes the heater-hose a relevant, serviceable part on this model.

The heater hose on a Captiva 5 quietly does an essential job: it channels hot engine coolant through the heater core so the cabin can warm up on a frosty morning, while also helping stabilise engine temperatures. It’s typically a moulded rubber hose (or pair of hoses) with quick-connects or clamps at the engine side and firewall. Petrol and diesel variants alike use these hoses as part of the closed cooling circuit.

Because they live near heat, oil mist, and vibration, heater hoses age. Over time the rubber can harden, swell, or crack, and connections can seep. During regular servicing, a good workshop will check the hose condition under the bonnet, feeling for soft spots, bulges, surface cracking, and looking for dried coolant crust around joins. Many workshops recommend pre-emptive replacement at around 8–10 years or 150,000–200,000 km, especially if the vehicle tows, sees lots of stop–start, or has had mixed coolant history.

  • Common warning signs: sweet coolant smell in the cabin, fogged windscreen, low coolant level, dampness at the firewall, soft or spongy hose, or visible leaks.
  • Best practice when replacing: use quality, vehicle-specific moulded hoses