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Parts for your 2013 Toyota Mark x-Thermostat housing

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2013 Toyota Mark X Thermostat Housing — What It Does and When to Service It

Technical sources confirm the 2013 Toyota Mark X (GRX130/133 series, 4GR-FSE 2.5L and 2GR-FSE 3.5L) is fitted with a thermostat housing, also described by Toyota as the “water inlet” that holds the thermostat. This is illustrated in Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalog (Cooling System diagrams for GRX130/133) and detailed in the Toyota Repair Manual for the 4GR-FSE/2GR-FSE cooling system, which covers removal/installation of the water inlet with thermostat and sealing ring.

The thermostat housing on the 2013 Toyota Mark X plays a quiet but crucial role. It secures the thermostat in the cooling circuit, directs coolant flow from the radiator into the engine, and provides sealing surfaces so the system holds pressure. On the GRX130-series V6s, that housing sits at the front of the engine under the bonnet, where the lower radiator hose meets the engine—easy to spot by the hose connection and the housing’s mounting bolts.

For owners, it’s worth thinking of the housing and thermostat as a matched set. The thermostat meters coolant so the engine warms quickly and stays in the sweet spot for power, economy, and emissions. If the housing cracks, warps, or its O-ring goes hard, leaks start and temperature control can go pear-shaped. Toyota specifies Super Long Life Coolant (pink, premixed) and service literature commonly calls for a long interval—often up to 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then around every 80,000 km or 5 years thereafter. Whenever coolant service is due, it’s smart to inspect the housing and the area around the lower radiator hose for weeping, pink crust, or staining.

Replacement is generally condition-based rather than time-based. Tell-tales include slow warm-up, overheating, temp gauge wavering, heater going cold at speed, or visible leaks. If the thermostat is being replaced, many workshops prefer to fit a fresh housing seal or the complete housing assembly to avoid do-overs. Use new O-rings/gaskets, clean the mating face, follow the repair manual torque spec for the housing bolts, and bleed the cooling system to avoid air pockets. A pressure test after refilling helps confirm it’s all sealed up nicely.

Practical tips for the Mark X:

  • Stick with Toyota-spec pink SLLC and avoid mixing coolant colours.
  • If the housing is composite/plastic, inspect for hairline cracks and distortion.
  • Any corrosion or pitting on alloy mating faces means the seal may not last—consider replacement.
  • Always verify thermostat temperature rating matches the engine spec per the Toyota manual.

References: Toyota Electronic Parts Catalog (GRX130/133 Cooling System – Water Inlet/Thermostat)