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Parts for your 2022 Suzuki Splash-Head gasket

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2022 Suzuki Splash head-gasket: what it is, what it does, and when to sort it

Based on factory technical literature, a head-gasket is absolutely relevant to a 2022-registered Suzuki Splash. The Suzuki Splash/Ritz workshop manuals for the K10B (1.0-litre) and K12B (1.2-litre) petrol engines, the Suzuki Electronic Parts Catalogue, and the D13A 1.3 DDiS (Fiat Multijet) service manual all specify a multi‑layer steel (MLS) cylinder head-gasket and torque‑to‑yield head bolts. That means every Splash variant uses a head-gasket between the cylinder head and engine block.

In this little Suzuki, the head-gasket’s job is dead simple but super critical: it seals combustion pressure in the cylinders while keeping oil and coolant in their own circuits. Being an alloy head on an alloy block (with liners on petrol variants), heat cycles and pressure swings are normal—so the MLS gasket is engineered to cope with those changes without weeping or losing clamp load.

Owners and techs should treat the head-gasket as a fit‑for‑life part—don’t replace it on a schedule. Instead, look after the cooling system so the gasket isn’t stressed by overheating. Use the correct long‑life coolant, keep the mix right, and change it on time. Make sure the radiator cap holds pressure, the fans cut in properly, and there are no sneaky leaks from the water pump or hoses.

  • Common warning signs: unexplained coolant loss, sweet steam from the exhaust once warm, milky residue on the oil cap or dipstick, misfire on cold start, bubbling in the expansion tank, or persistent overheating.
  • Good checks before any big call: cooling‑system pressure test, chemical block test for combustion gases in the coolant, compression and leak‑down tests, and a scan for misfire or cooling‑fan faults.

If the head-gasket has to be replaced, follow the workshop manual steps for your engine code (K10B, K12B or D13A). Always use a quality MLS gasket, replace the torque‑to‑yield head bolts, and stick to the specified tightening sequence and angle stages, working from the centre out. Have the cylinder head cleaned and measured for flatness