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Parts for your 2013 Volvo Xc60-Manifold gasket
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2013 Volvo XC60 manifold-gasket — what it does and when to replace it
Based on technical references including Volvo VIDA (Vehicle Information & Diagnostics for Aftersales) for MY2013 XC60 powertrains, Genuine Volvo Parts Catalogue listings for the B6304T petrol and D5244T diesel engines, and standard service data used in Autodata/Haynes manuals, the 2013 Volvo XC60 is fitted with manifold gaskets. Both intake and exhaust manifolds use dedicated sealing gaskets or moulded port seals, so a manifold-gasket is absolutely relevant on this model.
On this XC60, the manifold-gasket’s job is simple but critical: seal the join between the cylinder head and the intake and/or exhaust manifolds. On the intake side, it prevents unmetered air leaks that can cause rough idle, misfires, and fuel trims to go walkabout. On the exhaust side, it keeps hot gases inside the manifold and turbo path, protecting nearby components and ensuring the oxygen sensor and turbo see the right flow and pressure.
For owners in Australia and New Zealand, heat, dust, and plenty of stop–start or towing can age these gaskets. With age, rubberised intake seals can harden and shrink, while exhaust gaskets can erode or warp if the manifold fasteners loosen. It’s smart to inspect them any time the manifold comes off, during turbo, EGR, PCV, or swirl-flap work, and at higher kilometres when chasing vacuum leaks or exhaust ticks.
- Common signs it’s time: ticking or chuffing from cold start, sooty marks around the exhaust flange, a whistling intake leak, rough idle, higher fuel use, or fault codes for lean mixture or turbo efficiency.
- Best practice: always renew the gasket when a manifold is removed