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Parts for your 2013 Toyota Fortuner-Batteries
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Narva Model 72 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
Narva 9-33 Volt LED Rear Stop/Tail, Right Hand Squential direcion indicator and reverse lamps with in built retro reflector and 0.5m hard wired cable - 97312R
Narva Model 72 Rear Stop/Tail/Indicator/Reverse Lamp With In-Built Retro Reflector, With 0.5M Of Cable
2013 Toyota Fortuner batteries — what they do and when to replace them
Based on technical sources including the Toyota Fortuner owner’s and repair manuals for the 2011–2015 generation (electrical system: battery/charging) and well‑known fitment guides used in AU/NZ workshops (e.g., Century Batteries and Exide application data), the 2013 Toyota Fortuner is fitted with a conventional 12‑volt lead‑acid starter battery. So yes — a battery is absolutely relevant and used on this model.
In day‑to‑day motoring, the battery’s job is to crank the engine, power the ECU, fuel system, and safety gear, and keep things stable when loads spike. On diesel Fortuners it also supports glow plug draw before start. Once running, the alternator does the heavy lifting while the battery smooths voltage and buffers accessories like lights, infotainment and charge sockets. If the vehicle carries touring gear such as a fridge, lights or a winch, owners often add a dedicated auxiliary/dual battery, but the starting battery still leads the show.
For replacement, most 2013 Fortuner diesels commonly use a high‑CCA case (often N70/N70ZZ type with left‑hand positive), while many petrol variants use a slightly smaller case (commonly 55D23). Exact dimensions, terminal layout and cold‑cranking rating should be matched to the vehicle build and market