If you’ve ever torn down a tractor cooling system on a cold morning, you know the feel of a good pump versus a tired one. The whole story starts with the
engine water pump function—move coolant with steady flow and minimal loss, keep cavitation at bay, and live a long, quiet life under the belt. Today I’m looking at a very specific unit: the 6901-0651 Water Pump Without Outlet To Radiator With Pulley (UNC) for ZETOR 5201, sourced from Jichangzhuang Village, Ningjin County, Xingtai City, Hebei, China. It’s a mouthful, but in the field it’s basically the heartbeat of the cooling loop.

Actually, what matters most is reliability. Many customers say this model drops coolant temps a few degrees compared with worn OEM units, and—surprisingly—noise falls too when bearings and impeller balance are on spec.
Product snapshot: ZETOR 5201 pump
| Product Name |
6901-0651 Water Pump Without Outlet To Radiator With Pulley (UNC) ZETOR 5201 |
| OEM No. |
69010651 |
| Fitment |
Zetor 5201 (Czech series) |
| Housing / Impeller |
Cast iron housing; cast iron or stamped steel impeller (order-specific) |
| Bearing / Seal |
Dual-row bearing; mechanical seal (carbon-ceramic or SiC/SiC) |
| Pulley Interface |
UNC threads; groove count customizable |
| Flow/Head (bench) |
≈ 75–95 L/min @ 3,000 rpm; ΔP ≈ 0.6–0.9 bar (real-world use may vary) |
| Service Life |
4,000–6,000 tractor hours or 60,000–100,000 miles equivalent (with ASTM D3306 coolant) |
| MOQ / Payments |
100 PCS; T/T, Western Union |
How it works (and why it matters)
In plain words, the pump converts belt energy into coolant circulation through the block, head, and radiator. The
engine water pump function is to sustain flow at varying RPM without cavitation, hold seal integrity under thermal cycling, and maintain bearing stability. Fail any of those and you’ll see hot spots, steam pockets, and—eventually—head gasket drama.
Manufacturing and testing flow
- Materials: high-strength cast iron housing; hardened shaft; SiC/graphite seal faces; anti-corrosion coating (per ISO 9227 salt-spray screening).
- Methods: precision sand casting; CNC machining of bearing bores and seal seats; dynamic impeller balancing to ISO 1940-1 G6.3; pulley run-out check.
- End-of-line tests: hydrostatic leak test at 1.5× operating pressure; flow bench at multiple RPM; noise/vibration audit (FFT).
- Standards: IATF 16949 quality system; coolant compatibility checked against ASTM D3306; endurance rig 500 h @ 3,000 rpm (sample lot).
- Service life target: 5+ years in mixed farm duty with correct belt tension and coolant maintenance.
Use cases and feedback
- Agriculture: Zetor 5201 field tillage and loader work; steady temps under slow, high-load conditions.
- Stationary PTO: threshers/irrigation where airflow is limited—here the
engine water pump function is critical at extended mid-RPM.
- Customer notes: “coolant temp dropped ~7°C on grade” and “bearing noise gone at idle.” Not a lab report, but it tracks with our bench data.
Industry trend check
Electrified pumps are everywhere in autos; in tractors like Zetor, belt-driven units still dominate for simplicity and serviceability. Materials are trending to SiC/SiC seals and composite impellers; however, cast iron impellers remain a favorite in dusty, high-vibration settings.
Vendor landscape (quick comparison)
| Vendor Type |
Certs |
Lead Time |
Price (USD) |
Warranty |
Notes |
| OEM-aligned factory (Hebei) |
IATF 16949, ISO 9001 |
25–35 days |
≈ $38–$55 |
12–18 months |
Good balance, strong QC reports |
| Aftermarket trader |
ISO 9001 (varies) |
7–15 days ex-stock |
≈ $32–$48 |
6–12 months |
Fast, but mixed traceability |
| Reman specialist |
Process audited |
10–20 days |
≈ $28–$40 |
6–12 months |
Eco-friendly; core needed |
Customization options
- Pulley grooves and UNC thread spec; belt alignment tolerances ±0.2 mm.
- Seal pairing: carbon-ceramic (cost-effective) or SiC/SiC (abrasive coolant).
- Impeller: cast iron for durability; stamped steel for quicker spin-up.
- Branding, packaging with VCI wrap, and gasket kits.
Case note
A mid-size farm in Moravia swapped to this unit ahead of harvest; with fresh coolant (50/50 OAT per ASTM D3306), radiator cleaned, and belt retensioned, their Zetor 5201 stabilized at 86–90°C in heavy tillage. The
engine water pump function wasn’t glamorous—just consistent.
Certifications and compliance
IATF 16949 production, ISO 9001 QMS, material RoHS/REACH statements on request. Pressure, flow, and balance reports can ship with each lot. MOQ is 100 PCS; payments via T/T or Western Union.
References
1) IATF 16949:2016 – Automotive Quality Management System (iatfglobaloversight.org)
2) ISO 1940-1 – Mechanical vibration, Balance quality requirements (iso.org)
3) ISO 9227 – Corrosion tests in artificial atmospheres, Salt spray tests (iso.org)
4) ASTM D3306 – Standard Spec for Glycol Base Engine Coolant (astm.org)
5) SAE J1994 – Engine coolant performance (sae.org)