Peter you can buy Koyo branded parts. Koyo makes the oem Toyota wheel bearing hub assemblies. Koyo or Jtekt North America is the oem supplier for Toyota wheel bearing assemblies.
I purchased Toyota for a reason and if I can at all afford it on my almost 300,000 mile 2009 Corolla I just keep it all Toyota. I haven’t regretted it in the long run even a bit of a financial sting upfront. Indeed as the old saying goes « the Joy of a lower price is truly forgotten when the bitterness of poor quality sets in
Samething happen to one of the customer's accord we took the complete set of front bearing from junck yard and ut worked perfectly... thank you for the precious information...❤❤
All are Very interesting videos..your narration is music to the ears.. Question..there seem to be several parts places that sell the complete assembled hub and bearing part. Will you continue to purchase the replacements in complete form? And if so who's do you recommend? Thanks for your tutorials.
It's always hit or miss with after market parts. In some cases, you may not even have a choice as many parts for older vehicles aren't even available from dealers.
Defective sensors can drive you NUTS. It happens a lot with sensors made in China. Just because a sensor is new, doesn't mean it is good. Ivan, from Pine Hollow Auto Diagnostics, runs into bad new sensors quite often because people bring him 'hard cases' to try and repair, many times after they have replaced hundreds of dollars of parts, yet not solved the problem. He did a Chrysler truck yesterday, where a defective new throttle position sensor wouldn't allow the engine to start. Once he replaced it with a new Chrysler dealer supplied one made in the USA, it started right up. He urges people to stay away from generic sensors. His site is targeted at mechanics who understand electronics, but it is still fun for the layman to watch.
I have experienced the same problems w/ dodgy aftermarket parts in the (non-automotive) work I do. It's a time waster, a money waster, and a reputation killer. I can get compensated for the first two, but never for the last.
Great video! Ya when it comes to electronic parts especially, always stick with OEM. You may get away with aftermarket mechanical parts but even then OEM will usually last that much longer. Save $$ in the long run. I have a 2008 Lexus ES 350 and a 2010 Lexus RX 350. Both built like tanks and always OEM parts. Love them! Cheers!
Greetings sir, I am getting C1241,C1406,C1414 on corolla 2015. There was no hub assembly change that could have caused this issue in my case. What do you recommend?
After market = after rubbish. Used OEM part is better than new after market part. Bearings and sensors are 2 big no no's. Walk like a 🦆 talk like a 🦆 and swim like a 🦆 but don't quack like a 🦆.
Peter you cannot use cheap aftermarket parts. I see you doing that very often and there is price to pay for being cheap and possibly maximizing your profit margins or saving your customer some money.
@@michael184272 He is more knowledgeable than i am really, im not that familiar with the tacoma to say in absolute certainty that there should be an ABS ring there, but i know that on the hilux with shares a lot of the same components with the tacoma, that there is an abs ring on the hub assembly and i would imagine the speed sensor/abs sensor would go absolutely bananas if that ring was missing
Peter you can buy Koyo branded parts. Koyo makes the oem Toyota wheel bearing hub assemblies. Koyo or Jtekt North America is the oem supplier for Toyota wheel bearing assemblies.
Wow, great job problem solving this one Petr!!
I purchased Toyota for a reason and if I can at all afford it on my almost 300,000 mile 2009 Corolla I just keep it all Toyota. I haven’t regretted it in the long run even a bit of a financial sting upfront. Indeed as the old saying goes « the Joy of a lower price is truly forgotten when the bitterness of poor quality sets in
Samething happen to one of the customer's accord we took the complete set of front bearing from junck yard and ut worked perfectly... thank you for the precious information...❤❤
Peter it is helpful because sometimes I'm tempted as well but so far I have always bit the bullet and bought only toyota parts
Thanks for sharing this video. Interesting and informative.
All are Very interesting videos..your narration is music to the ears..
Question..there seem to be several parts places that sell the complete assembled hub and bearing part.
Will you continue to purchase the replacements in complete form? And if so who's do you recommend?
Thanks for your tutorials.
Great Work Peter 😎
It's always hit or miss with after market parts. In some cases, you may not even have a choice as many parts for older vehicles aren't even available from dealers.
Welcome back my friend ❣️🖐️👍
Defective sensors can drive you NUTS. It happens a lot with sensors made in China. Just because a sensor is new, doesn't mean it is good. Ivan, from Pine Hollow Auto Diagnostics, runs into bad new sensors quite often because people bring him 'hard cases' to try and repair, many times after they have replaced hundreds of dollars of parts, yet not solved the problem. He did a Chrysler truck yesterday, where a defective new throttle position sensor wouldn't allow the engine to start. Once he replaced it with a new Chrysler dealer supplied one made in the USA, it started right up. He urges people to stay away from generic sensors.
His site is targeted at mechanics who understand electronics, but it is still fun for the layman to watch.
I have being experiencing similar sign when I drive my Toyota Rav4 2010.
I have experienced the same problems w/ dodgy aftermarket parts in the (non-automotive) work I do. It's a time waster, a money waster, and a reputation killer. I can get compensated for the first two, but never for the last.
Only Use Toyota OEM Parts, Got It 😎
oem is safest, i've had too many after market parts fail. 2017 with 181,000, lot of driving
Great video! Ya when it comes to electronic parts especially, always stick with OEM. You may get away with aftermarket mechanical parts but even then OEM will usually last that much longer. Save $$ in the long run. I have a 2008 Lexus ES 350 and a 2010 Lexus RX 350. Both built like tanks and always OEM parts. Love them! Cheers!
Great video very informative
Thank You 🙏
Greetings sir, I am getting C1241,C1406,C1414 on corolla 2015. There was no hub assembly change that could have caused this issue in my case. What do you recommend?
After market = after rubbish. Used OEM part is better than new after market part. Bearings and sensors are 2 big no no's. Walk like a 🦆 talk like a 🦆 and swim like a 🦆 but don't quack like a 🦆.
What’s the for the part ?
I have a 2012 scion xb and I need the water pump changed. 2AZFE motor. How many hours should that take?
I drive Toyota Auris 2009,👍🏻
Hello I have 2012 highlander could you tell me if it has low beam relay location I appreciate your videos ty ..
who is the maker of the faulty part?
I don't think he will tell us. But he has a new parts supplier this year. O'Reilly. Could be them. Could be someone else.
Peter you cannot use cheap aftermarket parts. I see you doing that very often and there is price to pay for being cheap and possibly maximizing your profit margins or saving your customer some money.
He knows. Look back to his Subie timing job. But he's a good guy who wants to help his best customers.
👍👍
That hub is missing the ABS ring.
Is that clearly visible that it's missing somehow... wouldn't Peter have been able to see that before the installation?? Just wondering
@@michael184272 He is more knowledgeable than i am really, im not that familiar with the tacoma to say in absolute certainty that there should be an ABS ring there, but i know that on the hilux with shares a lot of the same components with the tacoma, that there is an abs ring on the hub assembly and i would imagine the speed sensor/abs sensor would go absolutely bananas if that ring was missing
Anything to do with a censor you better go OME father market ones are terrible
Great video very informative
Great video very informative