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Parts for your 2016 Toyota Bb-Radiator
Nulon Pro-Strength Extreme Cooling System Flush & Degreaser 500ml - PSCSF
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Explore 4WD & Adventure
Loctite 620 High Strength High Temp Retaining Compound 50ml - 235288
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2016 Toyota bB radiator: what it does and how to look after it
Per Toyota’s factory literature for the bB QNC2# series (2016 model year) — including the Toyota Repair Manual and the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for 1NZ‑FE/2SZ‑FE engines — this vehicle uses a conventional liquid‑cooling system with an aluminium cross‑flow radiator, electric cooling fan, radiator cap, and upper/lower hoses. So yes, a radiator is fitted and it’s absolutely relevant on the 2016 Toyota bB.
The bB’s radiator keeps engine temps steady by shedding heat from the coolant as it flows through fine tubes and fins, with the fan kicking in when airflow under the bonnet isn’t enough. It works with the thermostat, water pump, and heater core, and on some auto grades it may also house an integrated transmission cooler in the side tank. With the A/C condenser sitting right in front, clean airflow through the radiator stack is critical.
As part of regular servicing, a workshop will usually check the coolant level and colour, inspect the cap seal, look for crusty deposits around hose joints, and make sure the fan and shroud are secure. Toyota’s Super Long Life Coolant (pink, pre‑mixed) is the go for this car. Typical Toyota guidance is an initial coolant replacement at up to 160,000 km or 10 years, then every 80,000 km or 5 years thereafter, but many Aussie and Kiwi workshops prefer a shorter interval if the vehicle sees lots of stop‑start or coastal use.
- Inspect at each service (10,000–15,000 km): level, leaks, hoses, cap, and fan operation.
- Keep the fin pack clear: gently hose bugs and debris from the grille side, never high‑pressure up close.
- Top up only with Toyota pink SLLC, don’t mix coolants or add plain water unless it’s an emergency.
Replacement is on the cards if there’s fin rot, tank cracks, internal blockage, muddy “sludge”, or repeated overheating. A proper radiator swap means draining coolant, removing the under‑covers, fan/shroud, hoses, and (if fitted) trans cooler lines, then lifting the core straight up. Refit with new clamps where needed, refill with the correct coolant, bleed with the heater on HOT, and verify no leaks under pressure. Always dispose of old coolant responsibly — it’s toxic to pets and waterways.
Get on top of cooling system care and the bB’s 1.3 or 1.5‑litre engine will stay happy through brutal Aussie and NZ summers, even with the A/C cranked.
Popular questions about the 2016 Toyota bB radiator
What coolant does a 2016 Toyota bB use, and how much goes in?
The 2016 bB is designed for Toyota Super Long Life Coolant (pink), which comes pre‑mixed. Most variants take roughly 5–6 litres for a full drain and refill, depending on engine and heater/core residuals. Always match what’s in the system and avoid mixing types.
How often should the radiator or coolant be replaced?
Coolant intervals commonly follow Toyota’s long‑life schedule: up to 160,000 km or 10 years initially, then about every 80,000 km or 5 years. Radiators themselves aren’t time‑based items, replace when leaking, corroded, blocked, or if temps creep up despite a healthy thermostat and cap.
Does the bB’s radiator include a transmission cooler?
Some automatic models route transmission fluid through a small heat exchanger inside the radiator side tank. If yours has two small metal lines at the radiator end tank, it’s fitted, manuals typically don’t. When replacing the radiator, cap or plug those lines and recheck trans fluid level afterwards.