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Parts for your 2013 Volvo Xc60-Water pump
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2013 Volvo XC60 water pump: what it does and when to service it
Volvo’s own workshop information (VIDA) and the Genuine Parts Catalogue list a mechanical coolant pump on every 2013 Volvo XC60 engine variant, including the five‑cylinder petrol and diesel (T5/D4/D5) and the six‑cylinder 3.2 and T6 petrol engines. Major aftermarket catalogues for timing and auxiliary drive systems likewise specify water pumps for these engines. So yes, the 2013 XC60 absolutely uses a water pump, it’s a core bit of the cooling system hardware.
The water pump’s job is simple but vital: it keeps coolant circulating through the block, head, heater core, and radiator to carry heat away and maintain stable operating temperature. On the XC60’s five‑cylinder engines, the pump is typically driven by the timing belt, on the six‑cylinder engines it’s driven by the auxiliary (serpentine) belt. Either way, if the pump gets noisy, leaks from the weep hole, or the bearing wears out, the engine can overheat in short order.
Because of that, smart servicing treats the pump as part of the wider drive system. For the timing‑belt 5‑cyl engines, many workshops in Australia and New Zealand replace the water pump when doing the belt and tensioner, commonly around 150,000–180,000 kilometres or 10 years (check the specific schedule for the engine code). For the 6‑cyl auxiliary‑belt engines, the pump isn’t tied to a timing belt, but it should be inspected at each service and replaced if there’s any play, noise, or seepage. Coolant should meet Volvo spec, while some schedules stretch coolant life to long intervals, plenty of local technicians prefer testing it annually and renewing around 5 years/100,000 kilometres to keep corrosion at bay.
Typical signs the XC60’s pump needs attention include:
- Pink/green residue or dampness around the pump or under‑tray
- Whirring/rumbling from the pump area or wobble at the pulley
- Gradual overheating or poor cabin heat at idle
When replacing, use a quality pump (OE or reputable brand), new gasket/O‑ring, correct torque, fresh Volvo‑spec coolant, and a proper bleed to purge air. It also pays to inspect the thermostat, radiator cap, and both belts while the spanners are out. A well‑fitted pump will quietly do its job for years, keeping the 2013 XC60 happy in Aussie and Kiwi conditions—from summer traffic to alpine runs.
Does the 2013 Volvo XC60 have a water pump?
Yes. Factory service information and parts listings show a mechanical water pump on all 2013 XC60 engines, whether five‑cylinder diesel/petrol (typically timing‑belt driven) or six‑cylinder petrol (auxiliary‑belt driven).
When should the water pump be replaced on a 2013 XC60?
On five‑cylinder timing‑belt engines, many workshops pair pump replacement with the timing belt at roughly 150,000–180,000 km or 10 years, or sooner if there’s leakage or noise. On six‑cylinder engines, inspect the pump each service, replace if there’s play, seepage, or bearing noise.
What does a failing XC60 water pump sound or look like?
Common clues are coolant traces near the pump, a chirp/whirr/rumble from the pump area, wobble at the pulley, temperature creep in traffic, or low heater performance at idle. Any of these warrant prompt inspection to avoid overheating.