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Parts for your 2014 Toyota Crown-Batteries
Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 550CCA - 75D23L MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 710CCA - DIN65LHX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery 4x4 & SUV Ultimate Performance 760CCA - N70ZZLX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 530CCA - 67EF MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Superior Performance 500CCA - 55D23L MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 360CCA - NS40ZLX MF
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
Repco by Century Car Battery 4x4 & SUV Ultimate Performance 760CCA - N70ZZX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 830CCA - DIN75LHX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Superior Performance 400CCA - NS60L MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Superior Performance 400CCA - NS60 MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 500CCA - DIN53LHX MF
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Repco by Century 4x4 & SUV Battery Ultimate Performance 680CCA - NS70X MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 730CCA - DIN75LX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 640CCA - DIN65LX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 430CCA - NS60LX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 430CCA - NS60LSX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Superior Performance 330CCA - NS40ZL MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Superior Performance 500CCA - DIN53L MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Superior Performance 510CCA - 58 MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 860CCA - DIN85LHX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery 4x4 & SUV Superior Performance 600CCA - NS70L MF
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Repco by Century 4x4 & SUV Battery Ultimate Performance 720CCA - NS70LX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 430CCA - NS60X MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 420CCA - DIN44LX MF
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Repco by Century Car Battery Ultimate Performance 360CCA - NS40ZX MF
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2014 Toyota Crown batteries — what they do and how to look after them
Based on Toyota technical literature for the S210 series (Owner’s Manual, Repair Manual, and New Car Features), the 2014 Toyota Crown absolutely uses batteries. Every variant runs a 12‑volt auxiliary battery, and the hybrid trims add a high‑voltage traction battery for drive power. So yes—batteries are very much relevant on this model.
On petrol Crowns, the 12‑volt battery cranks the engine and powers essentials like lights, infotainment, and all the ECUs. On hybrid Crowns, the 12‑volt doesn’t crank the engine, but it’s still critical: it wakes the computers, closes relays, and gets the car into READY so the high‑voltage system can do its thing. The hybrid also carries a traction battery that drives the electric motor and stores recovered energy.
For day‑to‑day ownership across Australia and New Zealand, the battery’s job is simple: start reliably, keep electronics stable, and ride out short trips, cold mornings, and the odd weekend parked at the beach. As a rule of thumb, expect 3–5 years from a quality 12‑volt unit in normal conditions. Heat, lots of short runs, or heavy accessory use (dashcams, fridges, sound systems) can shorten that. Hybrids often use an AGM‑type 12‑volt battery (usually mounted in the boot), which prefers a smart charger set to AGM mode if you ever need to top it up.
Good servicing keeps the Crown’s electrics happy. A workshop battery test yearly (or before a long roadie) is cheap insurance. When it’s time to replace, match the original size, terminal layout, and specs from the owner’s manual—hybrids in particular should stick with the correct AGM type. Use a memory saver if you want to keep presets, and if DIY‑ing, disconnect negative first, reconnect last. If you’re in a hybrid, never touch the high‑voltage battery—leave that to a qualified tech.
- Keep terminals clean, tight, and the hold‑down secure.
- Check charging voltage (roughly 13.8–14.5 V with the engine running).
- Drive regularly or use a maintainer if the car sits for weeks.
- Choose reputable brands and recycle the old battery properly.
- Watch for slow cranking, dim lights at idle, or random warning lights—early cues the battery’s fading.
For hybrids, also keep the boot area tidy so ventilation paths aren’t blocked, and have a specialist check the 12‑volt during regular servicing. A healthy small battery prevents a lot of “no READY” headaches.
What battery type fits a 2014 Toyota Crown?
Most petrol variants take a conventional 12‑volt lead‑acid battery sized to the original JIS dimensions and terminal orientation. Hybrid variants typically use a 12‑volt AGM auxiliary battery (often located in the boot) and a separate high‑voltage traction battery that is not a DIY item. The safest bet is to match the exact spec in the owner’s manual or parts catalogue by VIN.
How often should the battery be replaced on a 2014 Crown?
Plan on 3–5 years for the 12‑volt in everyday AU/NZ use, testing it annually from year three. If you do lots of short trips, see hot summers, or run accessories while parked, it may be sooner. Hybrids still need timely 12‑volt replacement—even though they don’t crank the engine, the small battery is critical to bring the system into READY.
Why won’t my 2014 Crown Hybrid go READY after a battery change?
Common causes include a weak or incorrect 12‑volt battery (AGM required on many hybrids), loose terminals, blown fusible links, or lost system initialisations. Check polarity, clamp tightness, and that the brake pedal is firmly pressed when starting. If issues persist, have a tech scan for codes and re‑initialise systems per the Toyota manual.