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Cooling and heating parts for Land Rover and Range Rover models across the Defender, Discovery, Range Rover, Freelander and Series families. Radiators, thermostats, water pumps, expansion tanks, coolant hoses, viscous fans, heater matrix components and HVAC blower parts, stocked in our Dutch warehouse network for EU dispatch.
System Overview
The cabin heater on Land Rover and Range Rover vehicles runs on coolant from the engine cooling circuit. A blocked heater matrix, a stuck heater valve, or a coolant leak inside the heater core all show up first as a heating fault, then as a cooling-system fault once coolant level drops far enough. For that reason this collection lists both: the cooling-circuit parts (radiators, thermostats, water pumps, hoses, expansion tanks, viscous fans, oil coolers) and the heating-side parts that share the same coolant loop (heater matrix, heater valves, blend door actuators, blower motors). Air-conditioning parts (compressors, condensers, evaporators) are included where stocked, since they share the climate-control housing with the heater on most generations.
Model Family ReferenceThe cooling demands and common failure points differ enough between model families that ordering by year and engine matters more than ordering by part description. The following is what to expect by family.
Cooling is a conventional belt-driven water pump, brass-cored radiator, and wax-pellet thermostat. Replacement is straightforward, but radiator core specification varies between 2.25 petrol and 2.25 diesel variants, and between long and short wheelbase chassis. Series owners should verify radiator dimensions against the existing unit before ordering, not against the catalogue listing alone.
Cooling layouts vary by engine across the production run. 200Tdi and 300Tdi share the basic intercooled diesel cooling architecture but with different hose routing and thermostat housings. Td5 introduces a viscous fan with electromagnetic clutch and a separate engine oil cooler. The 2.4 TDCi and 2.2 TDCi Puma variants add a charge-air cooler and revised expansion tank routing. Hose part numbers do not cross-reference between Tdi and Td5, even where the connection points look similar.
Discovery 1 shares cooling architecture with the contemporary Defender Tdi and Range Rover Classic V8. Discovery 2 Td5 introduces the same viscous-fan-with-clutch arrangement as the Defender Td5 and uses the same Td5-specific hose set. Discovery 2 V8 cooling is similar to the late Range Rover Classic V8 layout but is not interchangeable in detail.
These share the IBF platform and the 2.7 TDV6 (276DT) or 3.0 TDV6 (306DT) Lion engine architecture. The TDV6 plastic thermostat housing assembly is a known degradation item across this group: the housing cracks at the welded plastic seams, dropping coolant slowly enough that the first symptom is often a low-level warning rather than an overheat. Aluminium replacement housings are available and are the default sensible upgrade when the OEM plastic unit comes off. The water pump on the 3.0 TDV6 is timing-chain driven, so pump replacement is typically part of a wider timing service rather than a standalone job. Hose kits and the upper water outlet o-ring sets are sold separately and are model-year specific.
BMW M51 diesel and the late Rover V8 share the chassis but not the cooling layout. M51 cooling parts are largely shared with contemporary BMW E34/E36 platforms in part-number terms, so cross-reference is straightforward. The Rover V8 in P38 retains the classic-V8 thermostat housing pattern.
BMW M62 V8 petrol cooling (early production) gives way to the Jaguar AJ-V8 and TDV8 architectures (later production). Cooling layouts are not interchangeable between the M62 and the AJ-V8 era despite the same chassis code.
Modern aluminium-block Ingenium and 3.0 V6 variants use composite plastic cooling housings, electric water pumps on some variants, and integrated cooling-and-HVAC control modules. OEM part numbers are the only reliable cross-reference; visual identification across model years is unreliable on this generation.
K-Series cooling failure on the Freelander 1 is the well-documented head gasket weakness; coolant loss without a visible external leak is the diagnostic indicator. Freelander 2 water pump bearing failure is the dominant cooling fault on that generation, producing gradual overheating and reduced circulation rather than a sudden leak. The impeller can corrode on early FL2 variants and lose circulation without any visible drip.
Buyer ConfidenceCooling failures are urgent. Buyers under time pressure tend to order the most visible part first and discover the actual fault later. The following recurrences turn up in workshop returns.
On the 2.7 and 3.0 TDV6, the plastic thermostat housing cracks before the thermostat itself fails. Ordering only the thermostat means a second job a few months later. Replace the housing as an assembly, and inspect the upper hose connector and oil cooler o-rings while the circuit is drained.
On older diesels (Td5, 300Tdi) and on the Freelander 2, a worn water pump produces gradual overheating that mimics a partial radiator blockage. The radiator core may still flow fine on a flush test. Check pump pulley play and look for weeping at the front of the engine block before ordering a radiator.
Hose part numbers do not cross-reference between Tdi and Td5 on the Defender and Discovery, between M62 and AJ-V8 on the L322, or between 2.7 and 3.0 TDV6 despite shared overall layout. Use OEM part numbers, not catalogue descriptions.
On Discovery 2 and Td5-era Defenders, a non-functioning cabin heater is more often a stuck heater valve than a blocked matrix. Diagnose before ordering the matrix, since matrix replacement is dashboard-out labour and the valve is not.
Pre-Purchase Fitment ChecksA few checks save returns and second orders on cooling-system parts.
When the TDV6 plastic thermostat housing comes off, the upper water outlet o-ring set contains two of the three required o-rings on the genuine kit. The third o-ring is the most common source of a post-replacement leak. Either source the third o-ring separately from a generic Viton supplier (BS211 size cross-references on the genuine seal) or check the supplier's listing before placing the order.
Freelander 2 water pump failure is gradual, not sudden. Check pump pulley axial play and look for coolant weeping below the pump at every service from 80,000 km onwards. A bearing changed before it seizes prevents the impeller-corrosion secondary fault that turns a 1-hour job into a head-off coolant-contamination job.
A technical reference covering thermostat, water pump, radiator, hose and expansion tank diagnosis sequence, with model-specific failure patterns for the Discovery 4, Range Rover Sport L320, Freelander 2 and Tdi-era vehicles.
Land Rover overheating diagnosis guideA model-specific reference on why the TDV6 plastic thermostat housing fails on the Discovery 4 and what to replace as a complete assembly, including the upper water outlet and o-ring set.
Discovery 4 thermostat housing replacement guideA maintenance reference for the Freelander 1 covering the K-Series head gasket failure pattern, M47R Td4 cooling-side considerations, and the parts needed to address cooling-loop integrity.
Freelander 1 cooling system guideIn-stock radiators for Land Rover and Range Rover models, filterable by engine family above the grid.
Land Rover radiators collectionDefender parts collection covering Classic Defender (1983 to 2016) and New Defender L663 across all engine families.
Defender parts collectionDiscovery parts spanning Discovery 1 through Discovery 5 and Discovery Sport. Filter to your generation above the grid.
Discovery parts collectionRange Rover parts spanning Classic through L460, plus Sport L320, L494, L461, Evoque and Velar. Filter to your generation above the grid.
Range Rover parts collectionFreelander 1 (L314) and Freelander 2 (L359) parts, including K-Series, M47R Td4 and DW12 cooling components.
Freelander parts collectionLand Rover Series I, II, IIA and III parts, including radiator core variants for 2.25 petrol and diesel chassis.
Series parts collectionEngine parts including timing components, gaskets and ancillaries that pair with cooling-system work.
Engine parts collectionThe cabin heater on Land Rover and Range Rover vehicles runs on coolant from the engine cooling loop. A blocked heater matrix or stuck heater valve drops coolant flow and shows up as both a heating fault and a cooling-system fault. Listing both categories together reflects how the systems are linked on the vehicle.
Cooling parts are engine-specific rather than model-specific. Identify your engine family (200Tdi, 300Tdi, Td5, 2.7 TDV6, 3.0 TDV6, M62, AJ-V8, Ingenium and so on) and year of build before ordering. For Defender, Discovery 1 and Range Rover Classic produced before 1997, the chassis number is more reliable than the VIN for cross-referencing.
Air-conditioning compressors, condensers, evaporators and blower motors are listed where stocked, since they share the climate-control housing with the cabin heater on most Land Rover generations. Refrigerant servicing itself is outside the parts scope and is best handled by a workshop with the correct recovery equipment.
The cooling-circuit pressure check and coolant-condition check are part of every annual service on Land Rover vehicles. Factory coolant change intervals vary by engine family, with longer intervals on modern Ingenium variants than on older Td5 and TDV6 diesels. Always verify against the workshop manual entry for the specific engine.
The 2.7 and 3.0 TDV6 (Lion engine family, 276DT and 306DT) use a composite plastic thermostat housing assembly that degrades and cracks at the welded plastic seams over high-mileage service. Coolant loss is gradual; the first symptom is often a low-level warning rather than overheating. Aluminium replacement housings are widely available as a durable upgrade.
On belt-driven Land Rover engines (200Tdi, 300Tdi, M47R Freelander 1, 2.7 TDV6), the water pump is driven by the timing belt and should be replaced as a pair at every belt service. On chain-driven engines (3.0 TDV6, modern Ingenium variants), the water pump is a separate replacement, but on the 3.0 TDV6 the pump is driven by the timing chain, so pump replacement is typically scheduled as part of a wider timing service.
Updated: 17 May 2026