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Toyota Owners Club

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Posts posted by Toyota Owners Club

  1. I know the noise you are referring to and I would be tempted to believe it is coming from the master cylinder side rather than the pedal side.

    It may just be worth pulling the master cylinder back from the servo and visually ensuring the actuating rod is in place and that nothing is untoward in the vicinity (leaking master cylinder, actuator rod not rubbing against anything, etc)

    Also worth checking the vacuum pipe connection is secure as sometimes if leaking it can create a rasping sound when the pedal is applied.
    This also applies to the pedal side where it can also be heard when the pedal is applied as the valve switches from vacuum to ambient air which works the servo diaphragm. If this is the case then you may need a new brake servo

  2. Sounds like loose connections in the engine bay if the running fault is associated with bumpy roads.
    Start with checking the battery connections and terminals are tight.
    Check the earth leads going to the engine/trans are tight and not damaged

    When the code appears again then leave running and fiddle with leads in the engine bay to see if anything changes in the way of running (Ford call this the 'wiggle test' and is by far the best way to diagnose where a fault is)

  3. Thermostat would be my first thought and only other one would be the fact that the heater matrix may need another back-flushing if lots of debris came out on the previous flush then it may have dislodged more of it and it is sitting in the matrix.
    A temperature gun works well to measure various parts of the system to see where there is a hot or cold spot

  4. Did you replace the crank sensor with a reputable make?

    a lot of cheap aftermarket sensors (from dubious sources) don't work from the off and definitely worth trying a better quality sensor

    Also check you have spark/fuel, etc as this will not be present if the crank sensor is bad.
    If it is fuelling/sparking then it is unlikely to be the sensor at fault

  5. I would recommend genuine Toyota belts as I have fitted quite a few to cars that have had the slipping belt syndrome.
    It appears that even the top belt manufacturers that I would fit are now made in China and fall way short of the mark.

    Turns out there is hardly any rubber content in the belts anymore and they slip no matter how much you tighten (overtighten) them

    Manufactured with a fabric coating to ensure high resistance and to reduce belt noise (to quote: 100% heat resistant ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM) rubber)

    Not just plain old rubber belts that were made for the job but did perish very quickly 😞

  6. I think I would replace all of the spark plugs to start with (ensuring the gaps are correct as this can knock out the coils) and go from there to see if the misfire is cured.
    Replace any coils that are defective and easy to swap over to another cylinder to prove the coil if the fault changes to that cylinder

  7. Wow!  that's insanity.
    Certainly the weather/ambient temperature will have an effect on the batteries and charge rate but it certainly is not a viable form of transport if you encounter stations which are out of order or need to be somewhere in a set time.

    Thanks for sharing this information with the club....always handy to know if you are in the market for this model

  8. It should be a case of carefully removing the trim parts (would use plastic trim tools or fingernails as much as possible otherwise damage to the plastic can occur if you use a screwdriver or pick).
    The parts snap together but sometimes they can break on the clips so glue may be needed to reassemble

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