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Parts for your 2013 Subaru Tribeca-Water pump
Nulon Long Life Green Coolant Concentrate 5L - LL5
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GMB Water Pump OE Fit OE Performance 2 Year Warranty - GWSU-12AL
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2013 Subaru Tribeca water pump — what it does and when to replace it
Based on technical sources, the 2013 Subaru Tribeca absolutely uses a mechanical engine-driven water pump. The Subaru Factory Service Manual for the 2013MY Tribeca (EZ36 3.6‑litre H6) details water pump removal, inspection and refit in the Cooling section, and the Subaru genuine parts catalogue lists a complete water pump assembly and gasket for the EZ36 engine. Accessory-belt routing diagrams from major belt manufacturers also show the water pump pulley in the drive path. So yes — this model is fitted with a conventional water pump and it’s essential to engine cooling.
On the Tribeca’s 3.6‑litre flat‑six, the water pump circulates coolant through the block, heads, heater core and radiator to keep temperatures in the sweet spot under the bonnet. That steady flow helps prevent hot spots, controls thermal expansion, and stabilises emissions and fuel economy. Because the EZ36 uses timing chains, the water pump is mounted externally and driven by the serpentine belt, making access a bit friendlier than on belt‑driven cam engines where you’re buried behind the timing covers.
For servicing, routine checks are straightforward and worth the few minutes. Look for a crusty trail of dried coolant around the pump body or the weep hole, listen for a light bearing whine, and feel for play at the pulley with the belt off. If there’s a slow leak, a grumbly bearing, or creeping temps in traffic, it’s time to plan a replacement. Many owners align pump replacement with a major cooling system refresh. Subaru’s long‑life “Super Coolant” is designed for extended intervals, but real‑world Aussie and Kiwi conditions (heat, towing, city stop‑start) can shorten that — so test coolant health periodically and don’t push murky, tired fluid. When replacing the pump, it’s smart to fit a fresh serpentine belt and inspect idlers at the same time.
Bleeding is critical on the flat‑six: fill with the correct premix, set the heater to full hot, and burp the system carefully to clear air. A vacuum fill tool makes the job cleaner and helps avoid air locks. Use the proper gasket or O‑ring supplied with the pump, apply sealant only where the service manual specifies, and torque fasteners evenly. With quality parts, fresh coolant and a careful bleed, the Tribeca’s cooling system will stay rock‑solid for many kilometres.
- Check for leaks and bearing noise at each service.
- Replace pump if leaking, noisy, or if pulley has play.
- Use Subaru‑approved coolant, renew at sensible intervals for local conditions.
- Bleed thoroughly, consider vacuum filling to avoid air pockets.
Popular questions about 2013 Subaru Tribeca water pumps
How long does a 2013 Tribeca water pump typically last?
With good coolant and regular servicing, many EZ36 water pumps run well past 150,000 km and often to 200,000 km or more. Heat, driving style and maintenance history are the big variables.
If there’s weeping from the pump, a bearing squeal, or temperature instability, don’t wait for a hard failure — book the job and pair it with a coolant service and new serpentine belt.
Can you drive a Tribeca with a leaking water pump?
Short answer: it’s risky. A minor seep might hold for a short local trip, but leaks can worsen quickly, leading to overheating and potential engine damage.
If you must move the car, top up with the correct coolant, keep the heater on hot, and watch the gauge like a hawk — but the safest move is a tow to a workshop.
What coolant should be used and how much does it take?
Use Subaru‑approved long‑life premixed coolant suitable for aluminium engines. Mixing types or using plain water invites corrosion and pump wear.
Capacity is roughly in the nine to ten litre range for the EZ36 cooling system. Always confirm specifics in the owner’s manual and bleed thoroughly to avoid air pockets.