Toyota parts reviews

Models
20
2099
Parts
18
Popular models
Firestone Tires

I've had a FWD Corolla for 12 years and it has gotten me through the worst kind of storms in New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and here in NL with Firestone Winterforce tires. I swear by them! I've gotten through conditions in snow storms that even big jacked up 4 wheel drive trucks got stuck in.

Pros: gotten through worst storms
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OEM Toyota Spark plug

The OEM plugs are iridium and are good for 120k miles, per Toyota. I paid about $16 per from a dealership (which I was happy to do, because its a job I dont want to be doing again in 50k miles).

Pros: long lifespan, good durability
Vehicle: Toyota
Mileage: 193121 km
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BFGoodrich Tires

Been on 285/75/16 ko2s for 4 years. I also have a four wheel camper I use in summer, I tow my seadoo too. Separately most of the time but sometimes both. No regear. I run sport 4 with ect on. I can run 70-75, you gotta work her on the passes though. But my trucks been great.

Pros: reliable for 4 years, good for towing, handles highway speeds
Cons: struggles on mountain passes
Vehicle: Toyota
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Akebono Brake pads
SBRH33
  • Noise:
Rating 5.0

First those rotors are torched. Get some new rotors. They ain't that expensive for the Corolla. Then get yourself some new pads, Akebono Pro Act. Grab some Powerstop ceramic break grease. Some Ac/Delco silicone brake lube. These 2 products are top notch. Forget permatex, mission, 3m, superlube all that bullshit. If your calipers aren't toasted \"ripped piston boots, rusted pistons or seized/ rusty caliper pins. Then get new calipers. The noise you're experiencing could be from not using anything on the back of the pads where the piston touches and the caliper touches. Ripped piston boots give the old screechy screech as well. Take that caliper bracket off the wheel and wire wheel it free of all dirt/rust paying particular attention to where the pad clips sit, you want those areas to be perfectly clean and square. Razzle it down with some brake clean then apply the powerstop grease to the pad clip seats then set the clips and install the bracket back onto the wheel. Next use some of that powerstop grease and paint the ears on the new pads so they slide nice and easy in the pad clips. You don't need much. Please don't use copper anti seize on the pad ears. Just the powerstop stuff. Next clean off those caliper pins, boots and bores. Make sure the face of the piston is free of rust and dirt. Get those bores and boots super clean. Then add the ac/delco silicone to the pins careful not to blob any on the tip face of the pin, that is important. The ac delco is a bit different than all silicone paste/ grease. Be careful with it and don't apply too much. Get a little delco in the boot baffles and squish it around to distribute it inside the boot. Then just put it all back together. Bleed the lines in the correct order and done. I promise your brakes won't make a peep for a long long time. Service them at every oil change to make sure everything is lubey loobed.

Pros: top notch grease, quiet brakes
Cons: torched rotors, potential caliper issues
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OEM Toyota Sound deadening
VariousElk5602
  • Cabin noise:
Rating 4.0

There car's been great overall, my tank average fuel economy since late spring has been outstanding ( 4.6 L/100km which works out to better than 50 mpg). wintertime fuel economy isn't as good because the engine runs longer when stone cold and more often to get up to or keep at optimal running temperature. So short trips+below freezing temps.= running more on fuel & less on battery. It depending on the road surface you drive on of course, but it seems to me that too much road noise gets transmitted through the body. They could have spent a little bit more on some sound deadening, perhaps.

Pros: great overall, outstanding fuel economy
Cons: too much road noise
Vehicle: Toyota Corolla
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OEM Toyota Drive shaft

4th gen is notorious for drive shaft clunk, needs greasing about every other oil change. Grease completely makes it go away, for me at least.

Pros: grease makes clunk go away
Cons: drive shaft clunk
Vehicle: Toyota 4runner
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OEM Toyota Battery

Assuming that it's a hybrid and not a PHEV it should run you about $2,500 to have it done professionally, or less than $1000 to do it yourself. At least that was my experience with my Prius.

Pros: done professionally, do it yourself
Cons: cost $2,500, cost $1000
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ARB Shock absorbers
Mecmind
  • Body bounce:
Rating 1.0

Recently I put a set of their old man emu shocks on my wife’s 100 series just looking for a quality set of replacements. They looked quality. That being said the ride is abysmal! They are so stiff the car skips sideways when you hit bumps in a corner. It feels like the car is being rattled to pieces. They completely destroyed the very nice ride of the car.

Pros: looked quality
Cons: ride is abysmal, too stiff
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Goodyear Tires

I have them on my 2023 Highlander with 20" wheels, they were the OEM tire for my vehicle. After 2 years and 36k miles, I can say they're absolute trash. Mine just reached 4/32 - 5/32 recently. They slip terribly on wet roads, they don't inspire much confidence at all, and they are one of the worst tires I've ever owned.

Cons: absolute trash, slip on wet roads, low confidence
Mileage: 36000 km
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