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Parts for your 2014 Toyota Crown-Radiator

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GV Demineralised Water 5L - DEMIN-05L

GV Demineralised Water 5L - DEMIN-05L

$12
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GV Demineralised Water 2L - DEMIN-02L

GV Demineralised Water 2L - DEMIN-02L

$6
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2014 Toyota Crown radiator — what it does and how to look after it

Based on Toyota’s service literature for the S210-series Crown (2012–2018), the 2014 Toyota Crown is fitted with a conventional engine radiator as part of its liquid cooling system. The Toyota Repair Manual (cooling section) describes the radiator, thermostat, water pump and electric fans, and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue lists a dedicated radiator assembly for S210 Crown variants, including Hybrid models (which also have an additional inverter/e‑motor cooling loop). So yes, a radiator is absolutely relevant and used on the 2014 Toyota Crown.

The radiator’s job is straightforward: it sheds heat from the engine coolant so the V6 or hybrid petrol engine stays in its sweet spot, even on hot Aussie or Kiwi summer days or when towing up a steep hill. Coolant flows from the engine to the radiator, air passes through the core, and heat is carried away. On Hybrid Crowns, there’s the main engine radiator plus a separate circuit for the hybrid hardware, but the principle’s the same — controlled temperature equals reliability and efficiency.

As part of servicing a 2014 Toyota Crown radiator, it’s smart to keep on top of the basics. Toyota specifies Super Long Life Coolant (pink), which is pre‑mixed and designed to last — typically up to 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then every 80,000 km or 5 years thereafter. Sticking with the genuine coolant chemistry helps protect the alloy core and seals.

  • Check for leaks, staining or a sweet smell around the radiator tanks, hose joints and under the front of the car.
  • Inspect fins through the grille, gently straighten bent fins and wash out bugs and debris from the front (low pressure only).
  • Squeeze upper and lower hoses for softness, cracks or swelling, replace aged hoses and clamps.
  • Test the radiator cap and replace if the seal’s tired — a weak cap can cause boil‑over.
  • Watch the temp gauge and heater performance, sudden hot running or poor cabin heat can hint at low coolant or a partially blocked core.

When replacement is due (impact damage, corrosion, or internal blockage), a workshop will drain the system, disconnect the fans and hoses, lift out the old core, and refit with new rubber cushions and clamps. Refilling is best done with a vacuum fill tool to avoid air pockets, then bleeding per Toyota’s procedure. On Hybrid models, the inverter/e‑motor cooling loop has its own bleed routine. A quick road test and a pressure test round it out. Done right, the Crown’s radiator will keep the temps steady from city crawls to long‑haul motorway stints.

Popular questions about the 2014 Toyota Crown radiator

What coolant should be used in a 2014 Toyota Crown?

Toyota specifies pink Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (premixed). It’s formulated to protect alloy components and seals in the Crown’s cooling system, and it removes the guesswork of mixing. Avoid tap water top‑ups, if you must, use demineralised water and restore the proper coolant mix ASAP.

How often should the radiator or coolant be serviced?

For most S210 Crowns, the factory interval is up to 160,000 km or 10 years for the first coolant service, then every 80,000 km or 5 years. Inspect the radiator, hoses and cap at each regular service, and sooner if you notice coolant loss, staining, or rising temps.

Can a partially blocked radiator cause hybrid warnings?

Yes. On Hybrid Crowns there are separate cooling circuits, but poor airflow or a clogged engine radiator can raise under‑bonnet temps and contribute to thermal stress. If hybrid or engine temps creep up, have both the engine radiator and the hybrid cooling loop checked and bled correctly.