SSANGYONG 1624603980 RESERVOIR ASSY OIL

Product Specifications

Product quality
OEM Equivalent Grade
starstarstar
Wholesale price USD $46.01
Wholesale price CNY ¥312
bolt MOQ (Minimal order)
150 pcs
local_shipping Production time
30-45 days
package_2 Shipping Weight:
SSANGYONG 1624603980
SSANGYONG 6654601980
SSANGYONG 6654606380
SSANGYONG 6654601780
SSANGYONG 6654606080
SSANGYONG 6654606280
SSANGYONG 1614605780
SSANGYONG 1624603780
SSANGYONG 1624603880
SSANGYONG 6614663402
SSANGYONG 6654602180
SSANGYONG 1624606580
SSANGYONG 1614604680
SSANGYONG 6614604580
SSANGYONG 1614605080
SSANGYONG 1614603680
SSANGYONG 1624603580
SSANGYONG 1624603280
SSANGYONG 6654606180
SSANGYONG 6654605880
SSANGYONG 6654605680
SSANGYONG 6654605780
SSANGYONG 6654605980
SSANGYONG 6654605580
SSANGYONG 6654601880
SSANGYONG 6654601680
SSANGYONG 6654601580
SSANGYONG 6654601480
SSANGYONG 6654601380
SSANGYONG 6654601280
SSANGYONG 6654601180
SSANGYONG 6654601080
Overview & Operating Principle

The RESERVOIR ASSY OIL is the power steering fluid reservoir — a translucent or opaque plastic vessel mounted in the engine bay that stores the hydraulic fluid reserve for the power steering circuit, provides a deaeration volume where entrained air bubbles can separate from the returning fluid before it re-enters the pump inlet, and houses the integrated filter screen and the low-pressure return line connection. The reservoir operates as the low-pressure atmospheric end of the hydraulic power steering circuit: fluid returns from the steering rack through the low-pressure return hose into the reservoir's upper section, where the reduction in fluid velocity and the reservoir's baffle geometry cause entrained air to separate and vent through the cap's breather; the deaerated fluid then drains under gravity to the pump inlet pick-up at the reservoir's lowest point, from where the vane pump draws it and pressurises it for delivery to the rack's rotary valve. The reservoir cap incorporates a dipstick or MIN/MAX level markings moulded into the reservoir body for fluid level checking without removing the cap, and a vent valve in the cap that allows air exchange as the fluid volume changes with temperature while preventing dust and moisture ingress. An integrated mesh screen or foam filter element at the pump outlet port of the reservoir captures particulate contamination from the returning fluid before it reaches the pump inlet — this screen's condition is critical to pump service life as particles that bypass it are drawn directly into the pump's precision-clearance vane and rotor assembly.

This unit — SSANGYONG 1624603980 — is manufactured to OEM-equivalent specifications: reservoir body volume for the correct system fluid capacity, inlet and outlet port positions and connection tube diameters, mounting bracket geometry for the engine bay attachment position, cap and dipstick type with MIN/MAX markings calibrated for the system's operating temperature range, internal baffle geometry for air separation efficiency, integrated filter screen micron rating and flow area, and cap vent valve flow rate are matched to the original part. Supplied as a complete reservoir assembly with cap and filter. Available wholesale from 46.01 USD, MOQ 150 pcs, production lead time 30-45 days.

Power steering fluid reservoirs fail through cracks in the reservoir body from underbonnet heat cycling and impact damage that produce external fluid leaks; through internal sludge accumulation from severely degraded power steering fluid that blocks the integrated filter screen, restricting pump inlet flow and causing pump cavitation; and through cap seal deterioration that allows atmospheric contamination to enter the fluid, introducing abrasive particles to the pump and rack circuits. A cracked reservoir that is losing fluid progressively is a fire risk in addition to a loss-of-steering-assistance risk — power steering fluid dripping onto the exhaust manifold ignites readily at the exhaust's operating temperature.

Symptoms & Diagnostics
Power steering fluid level dropping progressively — reservoir requires topping up every few weeks without a visible puddle under the vehicle — a hairline crack in the reservoir body is leaking fluid slowly; the small leak rate allows the fluid to evaporate from the hot reservoir exterior before forming a puddle; add UV dye to the fluid and inspect with a UV lamp after a short drive to locate the crack; clean the reservoir exterior with degreaser first to make the UV-illuminated leak path visible against a clean background.
Power steering pump whining or groaning noise — particularly at cold start or during parking manoeuvres — combined with confirmed correct fluid level — the reservoir's internal filter screen is partially blocked with sludge from degraded power steering fluid, restricting pump inlet flow and causing cavitation; the noise reduces or disappears as the fluid warms and thins because the same restriction allows more flow at lower viscosity; replace the reservoir to provide a clean filter screen and change the fluid simultaneously.
Milky, foamy, or aerated power steering fluid visible in the reservoir — fluid that is pale brown or white rather than clear red or amber — water contamination from a failed cap seal or from a heat exchanger leak on systems with cooled power steering fluid; aerated fluid from a partially blocked return line or from a crack in the pump inlet tube that is admitting air; aerated fluid causes pump cavitation and compressible steering feel; replace the reservoir and investigate the source of contamination or aeration before refilling with fresh fluid.
Visible crack or deformation in the reservoir body — fracture line visible on inspection, typically at the mounting bracket attachment zone or at the hose connection boss — any structural breach in the reservoir body requires immediate replacement; a cracked reservoir that is leaking fluid in the underbonnet environment adjacent to the exhaust manifold is a fire risk; do not attempt to seal a cracked plastic reservoir with adhesive — the elevated underbonnet temperatures and fluid pressure cycling cause any adhesive repair to fail within a short period.
Black or dark brown power steering fluid with a burned smell — visible when the reservoir cap is removed — severely degraded fluid that has been overheated from a slipping pump or from a blocked filter screen causing pump cavitation heat buildup; degraded fluid has lost its seal conditioning additives and anti-wear package, accelerating rack seal and pump wear; replace the reservoir to provide a clean filter screen and flush the complete system with fresh fluid of the correct specification.
Power steering reservoir cap that cannot seal correctly — cap is loose, cracked, or the O-ring has hardened and fallen out — a reservoir without a sealing cap allows atmospheric dust and moisture to enter the fluid, introducing abrasive particles and water that degrade the fluid chemistry; a loose cap also allows fluid to splash out under engine movement at speed; replace the reservoir as a complete assembly — the cap and reservoir are designed as a matched set for correct venting and sealing.
Logistics & Customs
International HS Code
3926.90
EAEU Customs Code (TN VED)
3926 90 970 9
Typical Net Weight
Country of Manufacture
China
Standard MOQ
150 pcs
Production Lead Time
30-45 days
Always verify the exact 8-digit or 10-digit subheading with your customs broker for the destination country, as tariff schedules and duty rates vary by jurisdiction.
Installation Tips
  1. Drain the reservoir completely before disconnecting the hoses — use a clean turkey baster or hand pump to remove as much fluid as possible from the reservoir before loosening any hose clamp; this minimises the fluid spill when the return hose is disconnected; cap the pump inlet hose immediately after disconnection with a clean rag to prevent dirt ingress to the pump inlet during the reservoir replacement procedure.
  2. Flush both the pump inlet hose and the return hose with fresh power steering fluid before connecting them to the new reservoir — degraded fluid and sludge deposits in the hoses will immediately contaminate the new reservoir's filter screen and the fresh fluid; pour a small quantity of fresh power steering fluid of the correct specification through each hose from the reservoir end and collect it at the other end in a clean white container; inspect the flushed fluid for particulate contamination and repeat the flush until the emerging fluid is clean.
  3. Replace both hose connection clamps simultaneously with the reservoir — spring clamps that have been compressed on the hose stubs for an extended period take a permanent set and may not return to their designed clamping diameter when re-expanded onto the new reservoir's stubs; a clamp that does not fully seat on the stub allows an air leak at the pump inlet connection that causes cavitation, or a fluid leak at the return hose connection; replace with new OEM-type spring clamps or screw clamps of the correct diameter.
  4. Fill the new reservoir with fresh power steering fluid of the exact OEM specification to the MIN level mark before connecting the pump inlet hose — starting the engine with a dry pump inlet hose draws air rather than fluid through the pump on initial startup, causing a dry-running condition for the first few seconds that damages the pump's precision vane clearances; pre-filling ensures fluid is immediately available at the pump inlet on first startup.
  5. Bleed the power steering system after installation by turning the steering lock-to-lock five times with the engine running — this purges air from the pump, high-pressure line, rack, and return line into the reservoir where it can deaerate and vent through the cap; top up the fluid level after each lock-to-lock cycle as the level drops when air is expelled from the circuit; the system is fully bled when the fluid level stabilises, no further air bubbles are visible in the reservoir, and the pump no longer produces any cavitation noise.
  6. Install the new RESERVOIR ASSY OIL (SSANGYONG 1624603980), complete the bleed procedure, confirm the fluid level is at the MAX mark at operating temperature, inspect all hose connections for leaks with the engine running at idle and again at full lock, confirm smooth quiet steering assistance at all steering angles, and recheck the fluid level after a 10-minute test drive before returning the vehicle to service.
Tools: turkey baster or hand pump for reservoir draining, fresh power steering fluid of exact OEM specification, new hose clamps of correct diameter, torque wrench for reservoir bracket bolts, clean white container for flushed fluid inspection.
Frequently Asked Questions
How often should the power steering fluid and reservoir filter be serviced to prevent sludge accumulation?
Power steering fluid should be replaced every 60,000–80,000 km or every 4 years, whichever comes first — the same interval at which the reservoir's internal filter screen should be inspected and the reservoir replaced if sludge accumulation is found. Power steering fluid degrades through oxidation from sustained high-temperature operation and through additive depletion; degraded fluid deposits varnish and sludge on the reservoir's internal surfaces and filter screen progressively. The symptoms of blocked filter screen — pump whining at cold start and during parking — are frequently misdiagnosed as pump failure, leading to pump replacement with the sludge-contaminated reservoir left in place; the new pump immediately begins cavitating against the same restriction. Reservoir replacement at every fluid change interval eliminates this misdiagnosis and provides a known-clean filter for the fresh fluid. ok.parts supplies power steering fluid reservoirs at wholesale MOQ from 46.01 USD per unit.
Can the power steering reservoir's internal filter screen be cleaned and the reservoir reused, or must the complete assembly always be replaced?
The internal filter screen on most power steering reservoirs is not a user-serviceable element — the screen is either bonded into the reservoir body's outlet port or press-fitted in a position that does not allow removal without damaging the reservoir. Attempting to clean a sludge-blocked filter screen in place with solvent risks pushing degraded fluid residue deeper into the screen mesh without fully clearing the blockage, and solvent residue remaining in the reservoir contaminates the fresh power steering fluid on refill. The correct approach is complete reservoir replacement — the cost is modest, and a new reservoir provides a clean screen, a new cap seal, and a new tank body free of internal sludge deposits and external cracks that may have developed during the period of fluid degradation.
How does the OEM-equivalent aftermarket unit compare to the genuine OEM part?
OEM-equivalent units in this catalogue replicate the current OEM design geometry and material specification. Quality is verified against OEM cross-reference data. When ordering in bulk, confirm with our team that the specification matches the latest OEM revision for your application.
Is white-label or custom packaging available for wholesale orders?
Yes. ok.parts works directly with the manufacturing facility and can accommodate neutral white-label packaging or fully branded packaging with your company logo, part numbers, and barcode. Minimum order quantities and lead times for custom packaging may differ from standard stock. Contact the team via the inquiry form to discuss your specific requirements.
Frequently Replaced Together
PartReason for Combined Replacement
Power Steering Fluid
ATF or dedicated PS fluid — OEM specification
Reservoir replacement provides the mandatory opportunity to drain and renew the power steering fluid — reusing degraded fluid in a new reservoir immediately begins depositing varnish and sludge on the new reservoir's clean internal surfaces and filter screen, reproducing the blockage condition within a short period. Always drain the system as completely as possible through the reservoir and refill with fresh fluid of the exact OEM specification; never mix fluid types even when topping up a partially filled system as incompatible additive packages produce deposits that accelerate rack seal and pump wear.
Power Steering Pump
Vane pump assembly — OEM ref. varies
A reservoir that has been allowing a partially blocked filter screen to restrict pump inlet flow has been causing the pump to cavitate at every cold start and parking manoeuvre. A pump that has been operating under sustained cavitation has accelerated vane tip and rotor bore wear from the collapse of cavitation bubbles against these surfaces. If the pump produces a whining noise after reservoir replacement and system bleed, test its output pressure — a pump delivering below the OEM specification pressure requires replacement alongside the new reservoir; continuing with a cavitation-damaged pump will produce the same noise complaint within a short period of the reservoir service.
Power Steering Return Hose
Low-pressure return line — application-specific
The return hose connecting the steering rack to the reservoir accumulates internal varnish deposits from degraded power steering fluid over the same service period as the reservoir. A return hose with restricted bore reduces fluid return flow to the reservoir, maintaining elevated pressure at the rack's return port and reducing rack end seal life. With the reservoir removed for replacement, inspect the return hose by squeezing its cross-section — a hose that does not return to its full round diameter when released has an internal structure failure; replace the return hose simultaneously with the reservoir to ensure the complete low-pressure circuit is restored to correct flow capacity.