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Parts for your 2015 Toyota Fortuner-Spark plugs

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Permatex Dielectric Tune-Up Grease 9g - PX81150

Permatex Dielectric Tune-Up Grease 9g - PX81150

$24
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Penrite Greenkeepers 2 Stroke Oil 2.5L - SEGNKTS0025

Penrite Greenkeepers 2 Stroke Oil 2.5L - SEGNKTS0025

$37
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Penrite Greenkeepers 2 Stroke Oil 1L - SEGNKTS001

Penrite Greenkeepers 2 Stroke Oil 1L - SEGNKTS001

$27
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Penrite Greenkeepers 2 Stroke Oil 20L - SEGNKTS020

Penrite Greenkeepers 2 Stroke Oil 20L - SEGNKTS020

$297
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Nulon Engine Stop Smoke 500ml - SS
Clearance

Nulon Engine Stop Smoke 500ml - SS

$10
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WD40 Specialist Contact Cleaner 418ml - WD21104

WD40 Specialist Contact Cleaner 418ml - WD21104

$43
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Castrol OUTBOARD 2T 2 Stroke Oil 4L - 3377729

Castrol OUTBOARD 2T 2 Stroke Oil 4L - 3377729

$66
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Explore 4WD & Adventure

Morey's Injector Cleaner 250ml - MIC

Morey's Injector Cleaner 250ml - MIC

$17
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Castrol OUTBOARD 2T 2 Stroke Oil 1L - 3377726

Castrol OUTBOARD 2T 2 Stroke Oil 1L - 3377726

$45
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Repco Marine 2 Stroke Outboard Engine Oil 5L - RSSMOB2S-5

Repco Marine 2 Stroke Outboard Engine Oil 5L - RSSMOB2S-5

$88
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Showing 1 - 11 of 11 products

2015 Toyota Fortuner spark plugs — are they used?

Based on Toyota Australia’s 2015 Fortuner launch specifications and Toyota New Zealand’s model information, the local 2015 Fortuner is fitted exclusively with the 2.8‑litre 1GD‑FTV turbo‑diesel engine. Toyota’s service literature for the 1GD‑FTV, along with standard combustion theory outlined in technical references like the Bosch Automotive Handbook, confirms that diesel engines use compression ignition and glow plugs for cold starts — not spark plugs. So for Australian and New Zealand‑delivered 2015 Toyota Fortuner models, spark plugs aren’t relevant or fitted.

Why no spark plugs? In a diesel, very high compression heats the air in the cylinder, when diesel fuel is injected, it ignites due to that heat. Glow plugs simply help during cold starts by warming the combustion chamber. Spark plugs are a petrol‑engine item because petrol engines use an electrical spark to ignite the air‑fuel mix. Different systems, different parts.

There are exceptions in other markets. The Fortuner was offered overseas with petrol engines like the 2.7‑litre 2TR‑FE and 4.0‑litre 1GR‑FE, which do have spark plugs. If someone’s driving a private import with a petrol engine, then “2015 Toyota Fortuner spark plugs” are definitely a thing. For Australia and New Zealand stock vehicles, they aren’t.

  • How to check quickly: look for the engine code on the build plate (1GD‑FTV = diesel), the diesel label at the fuel filler, and the lack of ignition coils or plug leads under the bonnet.
  • Servicing focus for the diesel Fortuner: quality diesel fuel, timely fuel‑filter and air‑filter changes, healthy battery, and testing glow plugs if cold starts get sluggish or smoky.

If a 2015 Fortuner is petrol‑powered (imported), it will use long‑life iridium spark plugs. In that case, follow the owner’s manual for the correct plug type and replacement interval, typically around the 100,000–160,000 km mark for Toyota’s modern iridium‑equipped petrol engines. Always confirm via the VIN and the service schedule that matches the specific engine code.

Does a 2015 Toyota Fortuner have spark plugs?

For Australian and New Zealand models, no. They’re diesel‑only for that year and use glow plugs instead of spark plugs. That’s consistent with Toyota’s local specs and the 1GD‑FTV diesel design.

Some overseas 2015 Fortuners ran petrol engines. Those ones do have spark plugs, so owners of imported vehicles should check their engine code and manual.

What replaces “spark plug” maintenance on the diesel Fortuner?

Think glow plugs and good diesel housekeeping. If cold starts are rough, smoky, or slow, a technician can test glow‑plug resistance and operation, and check the glow‑plug relay and battery condition.

Regular servicing should include timely fuel‑filter and air‑filter changes, injector health checks, and using quality diesel to keep combustion clean and efficient.

If my imported 2015 Fortuner is petrol, when should the spark plugs be changed?

Petrol variants like the 2TR‑FE or 1GR‑FE typically run iridium plugs designed for long intervals — commonly around 100,000–160,000 km. Always follow the owner’s manual for the exact interval and plug specification.

When replacing, use the specified iridium plug, fit to the correct torque on a cool engine, and avoid anti‑seize if the plug has a factory‑plated thread, as Toyota service guidance generally advises.