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Parts for your 2014 Toyota Hilux-Manifold gasket

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2014 Toyota Hilux manifold-gasket — what it does and how to look after it

Based on Toyota’s Repair Manual for Hilux KUN/GGN/TGN series (2005–2015), the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue, and major AU/NZ gasket catalogues (e.g., Permaseal and Victor Reinz), the 2014 Hilux is built with both intake and exhaust manifold gaskets. So yes — a manifold-gasket is absolutely relevant and used on this ute.

On a 2014 Toyota Hilux, the manifold gasket’s job is simple but crucial: it seals the join between the cylinder head and the manifold. On the intake side, it keeps unmetered air from sneaking in, which protects idle quality, fuel economy, and turbo boost on diesel variants. On the exhaust side, it prevents hot gas leaks that can cause ticking noises, soot marks in the engine bay, and sluggish turbo response. The gasket also shields nearby components from heat and fumes, and helps the engine management system get stable airflow and pressure readings.

There’s no set replacement interval for a manifold-gasket — it’s a replace-once-disturbed or replace-when-leaking item. Any time the intake manifold is removed for EGR/soot cleaning (common on 1KD-FTV diesels), fresh gaskets should go in. Likewise, if the exhaust manifold comes off for turbo work or stud repairs, the old gasket should not be reused. Using new genuine or quality aftermarket gaskets, cleaning the mating faces properly, and tightening fasteners to the factory torque and sequence keeps everything sealed the way Toyota intended.

Owners and techs should keep an ear out for a light tick on cold start (often an exhaust leak), watch for black soot tracing around the manifold flange, and note any whooshing under boost or rough idle (potential intake leak). A diesel smell in the cabin, loss of low-down torque, or an engine light tied to airflow/EGR plausibility can also point to a tired gasket or disturbed joint.

Good practice on the Hilux includes: replacing single‑use nuts/studs if corroded, checking the manifold for warpage, cleaning carbon from the intake runners during service, and verifying boost and fuel trims after reassembly. Done right, a fresh manifold-gasket helps the Hilux start cleaner, pull harder, and run more efficiently across Aussie and Kiwi kilometres.

  • Use new gaskets whenever a manifold is removed.
  • Clean mating surfaces