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The hardware, fasteners, and fittings in your cooling and belt system are small parts that cause big problems when they fail. This collection covers 137 components spanning coolant reservoir caps, radiator drain plugs, water pump bolt kits, belt tensioner bolts, bleeder screws, hose clamps, pulley adjustment bolts, and more — the connective hardware that keeps your cooling circuit sealed and your accessory drive system properly tensioned. Coolant reservoir caps are the most frequently replaced item here: they're pressure-rated (typically 13–18 psi) and fail when the internal spring or seal degrades, causing coolant loss or overflow. When shopping, match the cap's pressure rating to your OEM spec — a mismatched cap can cause chronic overheating or reservoir cracking. For bolts and studs, verify thread pitch and torque spec before ordering; water pump and tensioner hardware is often application-specific. OEM hardware is the safest choice on pressure-side fittings; quality aftermarket is generally acceptable for clips, clamps, and spacers.
Signs you need replacement
- Coolant smell or visible residue around the reservoir cap or filler neck — a degraded cap seal allows pressurized coolant to escape, leaving a white crusty buildup or sweet-smelling film on the reservoir and surrounding plastic.
- Coolant overflow with no overheating present — a faulty reservoir cap that can't hold rated pressure vents coolant into the overflow tube prematurely, even when engine temperature is normal.
- Slow coolant loss with no obvious external leak — a failed radiator drain plug or bleeder screw can weep small amounts of coolant, especially when the system is hot and pressurized, without leaving a visible puddle.
- Belt squeal or tensioner rattle after a pulley or tensioner service — stripped or under-torqued pulley adjustment bolts and tensioner hardware allow components to shift under belt load, producing noise and accelerating belt wear.
- Coolant seeping from the water pump mounting surface — corroded or overtorqued water pump bolts and studs lose clamping force over time, breaking the gasket seal; inspect hardware any time the pump is replaced.
- Radiator or shroud rattling at idle or highway speeds — broken radiator support baffle clips and fan shroud clips allow the radiator and shroud to shift, which can damage cooling fins and stress hose connections.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should I replace a coolant reservoir cap? Replace the reservoir cap every 50,000–60,000 miles or at every major coolant service — whichever comes first. The internal spring and rubber seal degrade with heat cycling regardless of visible condition. If your cap shows any cracking, discoloration, or fails a pressure test below its rated psi, replace it immediately.
- Does it matter if I use OEM or aftermarket water pump bolts and stud kits? For water pump hardware, OEM or an OEM-equivalent (Dorman, ACDelco, Genuine) is recommended. Thread pitch, grip length, and coating all affect torque retention against a wet gasket surface. Generic hardware-store fasteners often lack the correct thread engagement or corrosion resistance for aluminum pump housings and can seize or strip during future service.
- What else should I replace when I'm already replacing water pump hardware or a radiator drain plug? If you're draining the system to replace a drain plug or bleeder screw, replace the coolant at the same time — most manufacturers specify a 5-year/100,000-mile interval. While the pump is accessible, inspect the gasket, hose clamps, and pulley bolt condition. Replacing worn hardware together saves labor on a second drain-and-refill later.














































