4 Products
Radiator Hose
A radiator hose carries coolant between the engine, radiator and related cooling components while accommodating vibration, thermal expansion and engine movement. Upper and lower hoses may look simple but can include moulded bends, internal reinforcement, bleed branches, expansion-tank returns, quick connectors, temperature-sensor housings and anti-collapse springs. The correct shape keeps the hose clear of belts, fans, exhaust parts and sharp edges.
Cooling hoses operate under heat, pressure and periods of vacuum as coolant contracts. Reinforcement limits expansion, while the elastomer must remain compatible with the approved coolant. Ageing can produce cracking, softening, hardening, oil swelling or internal delamination. A hose may look sound outside yet shed material internally or collapse under pump suction, restricting flow during higher engine speed.
Select using registration or VIN, engine code, transmission, production date and the exact connection position. Compare moulded route, bore, end diameters, branch count, connector type, sensor ports, sleeve locations and retaining clips. Do not cut away a moulded bend or force a universal hose where it kinks or loads a plastic radiator neck. Confirm whether O-rings, quick connectors, clamps and bleed fittings are included.
Warning signs include coloured residue at an end, bulges, surface cracks, rubbing marks, coolant smell, falling level, overheating or a hose that stays flattened after cooling. Similar evidence can come from a cracked radiator neck, failed cap, loose clamp, thermostat, pump or combustion pressure entering the cooling system. Repeated hose failure requires root-cause diagnosis rather than a stronger clamp.
Never open or disconnect a hot pressurised system. Allow full cooling, collect coolant safely and use clamps suited to the hose and connection. Clean sealing necks without scratching them, replace quick-connector O-rings where specified and route every branch through its original supports. Refill with the exact approved coolant, bleed trapped air and complete a pressure and heat-cycle check. Radiator hoses matching the selected vehicle are listed below.
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What radiator hoses do
Cooling-system hoses create flexible links between components mounted to the engine, body and front cooling module. They contain hot coolant while tolerating engine roll, road vibration and large temperature changes. Their moulded path is part of the vehicle design, not merely a convenient route.
The upper hose often carries hot coolant towards the radiator, while the lower returns cooled fluid to the pump. Actual direction varies, and smaller branches can supply expansion tanks, heaters, oil coolers, turbochargers and bleed circuits.
Coolant flow through flexible connections
- The water pump circulates coolant through the engine.
- The thermostat regulates flow towards the radiator.
- A moulded hose contains pressure between moving components.
- Branches vent air or feed auxiliary cooling circuits.
- Radiator tubes reject heat to passing air.
- A return hose carries coolant back towards the pump.
- The cap and expansion system manage pressure and contraction.
Hose designs
| Design | Typical features | Service focus |
|---|---|---|
| Moulded rubber hose | Vehicle-specific curves and different end diameters. | Correct orientation, clearance and clamp positions. |
| Branched hose assembly | Several moulded legs joined in one piece. | Every branch bore, length and support point must match. |
| Quick-connect hose | Plastic end fitting with O-ring and retaining clip. | Neck condition, seal renewal and positive clip engagement. |
| Hose with sensor housing | Integrated coolant sensor or switch port. | Connector, seal, sensor depth and bleed orientation. |
| Corrugated hose | Flexible moulded sections accommodate complex packaging. | Valley cracks and internal flow area need inspection. |
| Wire-reinforced suction hose | Internal support resists collapse at pump inlet. | Spring corrosion, position and hose compatibility matter. |
Pressure, vacuum and movement
- Internal pressure: loads reinforcement and every clamp joint.
- Pump suction: can flatten a weak lower hose at high flow.
- Heat cycles: age rubber and change clamp compression.
- Engine movement: bends hoses at specific flexible zones.
- Coolant chemistry: affects elastomer life and internal surfaces.
- External contamination: engine oil and fuel can swell many coolant hoses.
- Routing contact: abrasion concentrates damage in a small area.
Construction and materials
| Material/feature | Purpose | Failure concern |
|---|---|---|
| EPDM rubber | Resists approved coolant, ozone and cooling-system heat. | Oil contamination causes swelling and softening. |
| Textile reinforcement | Limits expansion and raises burst strength. | Kinking or abrasion can break hidden fibres. |
| Silicone hose | Wide temperature range in approved specialist applications. | Clamp method, permeability and fluid compatibility differ. |
| Plastic quick connector | Provides fast assembly and controlled sealing geometry. | Heat ageing makes clips and bodies brittle. |
| EPDM O-ring | Seals radially inside a connector. | Wrong size, lubricant or damaged neck causes leaks. |
| Protective sleeve | Guards against heat and local abrasion. | Missing or moved sleeves expose the hose. |
Clamps and connector systems
Constant-tension spring clamps
Spring clamps maintain force as hose and neck dimensions change with temperature. Use proper pliers and return them to their designed location. A clamp weakened by corrosion or stretched during removal should be renewed.
Worm-drive clamps
These provide adjustable diameter but can cut rubber, oval a plastic neck or create uneven load if overtightened. They are not automatically an upgrade from an engineered constant-tension clamp.
Quick connectors
The O-ring seals; the clip retains. Lubricate only as specified, push the fitting squarely until fully seated and perform a pull check. An old clip can appear engaged while sitting outside its groove.
Crimped branch joints
Factory hose assemblies may use moulded tees or permanent crimps. Leaks at these joints generally require replacement of the complete assembly rather than added clamps or sealant.
Selecting the correct hose
| Check | Possible variation | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Engine code | Thermostat, radiator and branch layout. | VIN and engine identification. |
| Transmission | Cooler circuit and radiator neck package. | Gearbox code and installed cooler. |
| Production date | Quick connector, sensor or route revision. | Build date. |
| End diameters | Radiator and engine neck sizes can differ. | Technical dimensions and physical comparison. |
| Branches/ports | Bleed, turbo, heater and expansion circuits vary. | Complete hose map. |
| Sleeves/supports | Heat shielding and abrasion points are location-specific. | Installed route and bracket positions. |
Coolant specifications
Use coolant carrying the exact manufacturer approval and correct concentration. Colour is not sufficient evidence. The inhibitor package protects metals and seals, while incorrect mixtures can create deposits and attack the water pump, radiator and hose interfaces.
Hose assembly lubricants must be compatible with EPDM and coolant. Engine oil, petroleum grease and fuel should be cleaned from hose surfaces and their leak source repaired. Stop-leak products can obstruct small passages and are not a substitute for sound hose and connector repair.
Inspection and diagnosis
- Check coolant level only when the system is safely cold.
- Inspect the full hose length, including underside and areas beneath sleeves.
- Look for residue, wetness, bulges, cracks, flattening and rubbing.
- Squeeze only when cold to identify unusual hardening or soft spots.
- Check clamps, connector clips, necks and support brackets.
- Pressure-test at the specified system pressure.
- Observe lower-hose shape under controlled higher-speed operation if collapse is suspected.
- After repair, heat-cycle and recheck the level cold.
Fault signs and urgency
| Sign | Possible cause | Response |
|---|---|---|
| Bulge near clamp | Reinforcement failure, age or overtightening. | Replace before rupture. |
| Coolant residue at end | Loose clamp, damaged neck, seal or hose hardening. | Inspect the joint rather than tightening blindly. |
| Hose collapses at speed | Weak hose, blocked recovery or missing support spring. | Diagnose promptly; coolant flow can be restricted. |
| Oil-swollen rubber | External petroleum contamination. | Repair oil leak and renew the hose. |
| Steam/temperature warning | Major leak or cooling failure. | Stop safely and never open while hot. |
| Repeated hose burst | Overpressure, combustion leak, wrong cap or routing fault. | Find root cause before another replacement. |
Replacement practice
Allow full cooling and release pressure as specified. Drain coolant responsibly and identify every branch before removal. Cutting an old hose may protect a fragile neck from twisting, but keep blades away from plastic and sealing surfaces.
Clean necks without aggressive abrasion, transfer only approved fittings and orient moulded markings correctly. Position clamps behind retaining beads and keep hoses free of torsion. Refill slowly, open bleed points, set cabin heating as instructed and verify pump, thermostat and fan operation.
Common mistakes
- Forcing a universal hose into a kinked route.
- Overtightening a worm clamp on a plastic neck.
- Reusing flattened quick-connector O-rings.
- Lubricating EPDM with petroleum grease.
- Leaving protective sleeves or support clips off.
- Pulling on a branch until its moulded joint cracks.
- Using sealant or stop-leak instead of repairing the joint.
- Opening a hot system.
- Mixing coolant based on colour.
- Failing to bleed trapped air.
Upgrades, maintenance and UK safety
Silicone or reinforced hoses should be vehicle-specific, compatible with coolant and oil exposure, and supported with suitable clamps. Increased hose strength does not make an overpressurised cooling system safe. Modified routing must preserve clearance and bleed function and may need insurer declaration.
Vehicles used for towing, prolonged idling or hot-climate operation place sustained thermal load on every hose joint. Preparation should include checking the cap, fan, coolant strength and radiator cleanliness rather than fitting a higher-rated hose alone. On vehicles stored for long periods, inspect for rodent damage, flat spots where hoses rest against brackets and corrosion beneath clamps before returning the cooling system to service.
Inspect hoses during routine servicing and before long high-load journeys. A serious fluid leak or insecure hose may affect roadworthiness and MOT assessment, but any cooling leak can quickly cause overheating and should be repaired regardless of test date.
Radiator hose FAQs
Q: How often should radiator hoses be replaced?
A: Follow inspection and vehicle guidance; there is no universal age interval.
Q: Why is the lower hose collapsing?
A: Weak construction, pump suction, blocked recovery or a missing internal support may be responsible.
Q: Can a universal hose be used?
A: Only if it meets application, bore, bend, pressure and clearance requirements without kinking.
Q: Are silicone hoses always better?
A: No. Compatibility, construction, clamps and routing determine suitability.
Q: Can I tighten a leaking clamp more?
A: First inspect for a cracked neck, hardened hose, wrong clamp or damaged seal.
Q: What causes a hose to bulge?
A: Internal reinforcement failure, ageing, contamination or excessive clamp stress.
Q: Should quick-connector O-rings be renewed?
A: Follow service data; damaged, flattened or hardened seals should not be reused.
Q: Can oil damage a coolant hose?
A: Yes. Petroleum contamination can soften and swell common EPDM hose.
Q: Why does a new hose leak?
A: Check the neck, clamp position, connector engagement, seal and system pressure.
Q: Can a split hose be taped temporarily?
A: No reliable road repair contains hot pressurised coolant; arrange recovery.
Q: Is coolant colour a specification?
A: No. Use the required manufacturer approval and mixture.
Q: Why must the system be bled?
A: Trapped air reduces circulation, heater output and temperature control.
Q: Will a leaking hose fail an MOT?
A: A serious fluid leak may affect roadworthiness, and overheating risk requires prompt repair.