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Parts for your 2016 Toyota Crown
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2016 Toyota Crown: easygoing luxury with straightforward upkeep
The 2016 Toyota Crown brings quiet, grown-up luxury with the sort of reliability Aussies and Kiwis rate highly. Whether it’s the efficient 2.5 hybrid, the punchy 2.0‑litre turbo, or the silky 3.5‑litre V6, the Crown delivers a calm, confident drive, tidy road manners, and a cabin stacked with comfort tech. It’s a Japanese‑market favourite that cruises local motorways just as happily as it threads through city traffic.
Owners after day‑to‑day consumables—filters, brake pads, wipers, fluids—will find genuine and aftermarket parts readily sourced through import specialists and well‑stocked parts counters. Under the bonnet, Toyota’s tidy layout keeps routine checks simple, and most servicing fits neatly into regular Aussie and NZ schedules.
- Engine oil and filter: every 10,000 km or 12 months, 0W‑20 is common for four‑cyl and hybrid, 5W‑30 suits some V6s—follow the under‑bonnet label.
- Transmission: e‑CVT (hybrid) inspections as per schedule, 8‑speed AT fluid typically 60,000–100,000 km depending on use.
- Coolant (Toyota SLLC): long‑life intervals, check from 100,000–160,000 km, then at shorter cycles.
- Brake fluid: every 2 years, pads/rotors as wear dictates.
- Spark plugs: iridium items often 100,000 km intervals.
- Filters: engine air and cabin pollen filters every 20,000–30,000 km.
- Tyres: rotate at 10,000 km, keep pressures around the placard (many sit ~36 psi), and align if it drifts.
- Hybrid bits: clean the battery cooling fan intake and check the 12V battery health each service.
The Crown runs a timing chain, not a belt, shaving a big job from the to‑do list. Use quality fuel—95 RON for turbo and V6 models is a safe bet—and keep software, navigation, and language settings sorted if it’s a fresh import. Look after the basics and this classy sedan just gets on with the job.
Is the 2016 Toyota Crown easy to service in Australia and New Zealand?
Yes. Regular consumables are straightforward to source, and many workshops are familiar with Toyota drivetrains. Import specialists can help with model‑specific bits, software settings, and compliance details.
What fuel should a 2016 Toyota Crown use?
Most owners run 95 RON. Turbo and V6 variants particularly benefit from premium unleaded. Some non‑turbo trims may accept 91 RON, but check the fuel flap or handbook to be safe.
Does the 2016 Toyota Crown have a timing belt or chain?
It uses a timing chain. With regular oil changes, chains typically last the life of the engine, avoiding scheduled belt replacements.