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Brake Pads and Rotors

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by Mr_Raja, Mar 11, 2024.

  1. Mr_Raja

    Mr_Raja Junior Member

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    Hello All,

    Anyone replaced their brake pads and rotors on all ends on their 3rd Gen Prius? If so, how many miles were you able to get out of the OEM ones, and what brand of pads and rotors did you go with? I have a 2015 Prius II with almost 98K miles on it, and am planning on handing it down to my nephew (teenager) as his first car.

    I took the car to a Toyota dealership for brake flush at 75K miles and the Technician mentioned that the brakes were still in good shape (in yellow zone), and, after visually checking the brakes myself at 95k, I am pretty confident that the brakes will easily last me up to 120k miles without any problem. But I want to play it safe and do all of the "major" service (plugs, filters, brakes, tires, CVT drain and refill) at 100k before handing the car over to my nephew.

    At the moment, I am leaning towards the Powerstop Pads and Rotors, but have looked at the Bosch as well. My Brother in Law used the Duralast pads and rotors in my sister's Lexus NX, and they are performing pretty well for her, so I have those on my list as well. But, I am still open for any other suggestion.

    If this question has been posted in the near past with good suggestions, please point me in to that direction because the search feature didnt bring back anything useful for me.

    TIA!
     
  2. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    I inspect my brakes regularly (every tire rotation) and only do what they actually need.

    Most of the time they need nothing. Now and then I'll need to change a fitting kit (the springy clips that hold the ears of the pads, their Teflon-like factory coating wears off and they rust).

    I replaced the rear pads and rotors a couple years ago. Plenty left on the pads but the rotors were getting rusty and gnarly.

    Everything still beautiful on the fronts. Pads with 22% life remaining at 170,000 miles, looks like I'll be replacing them around 218,000 if nothing changes much.

    I generally use Toyota parts when anything needs replacing, which is so seldom the price doesn't sting much. I made an exception for the rear rotors, where my local job shop had a pair in the Federated brand for a nice price, and they seemed round and flat enough to me.

    (In fact, one of them had so little runout that when I set it on the hub in the least-runout position, as the manual suggests, it wouldn't even push the pads back when I wasn't braking. I put it back on in the next-to-least runout position.)

    I have yet to relube my slide pins, or even take them out of their bores. At every inspection I move them in and out to wake the grease back up, and if they ever don't feel fine after that, I'll do more. Hasn't been needed so far.
     
    #2 ChapmanF, Mar 11, 2024
    Last edited: Mar 11, 2024
  3. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk EGR Fanatic

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    You're in one of the 5 Germantown's Google Maps shows in the States? How's the road salt situation in your area, through winter?

    Have you ever had the caliper's off? Toyota USA recommends a more in-depth inspection, tri-yearly or 30K miles, whichever comes first. They are vague as heck though, as to what the inspection entails.

    Considering miles only, your rotors are likely fine for thickness and runout, but dependinig on aforementioned salt, "may" need replacing. Pad remaining thickness will likely be down to around 4 mm (new thickness is around 10 mm). Service limit is 1 mm, but I wouldn't go that low with out changing them out. Caliper slide pins may never have been relubed, worth doing.

    Spec's and more info in attached.
     

    Attached Files:

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  4. Mr_Raja

    Mr_Raja Junior Member

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    @ChapmanF - Wow, 170k miles on the original?! I think I have read somewhere going over 120k miles, but running at 170k miles and expected to hit 200k on the originals is quite amazing.

    @Mendel Leisk - Thankfully, I live in Germantown MD, and salt is not a major issue around here. You barely see any rust under the cars here unless they are commuting up and down PA area. But you still made a good point about the pin's lubrication. Perhaps, if nothing else, I will remove the pins and coat them with a fresh coat of brake grease. I think at 80k miles, my brake pads were around 6mm thick, if I am not mistaking. The brake fluid change and inspection was a few years ago, so I don't recall very well.
     
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  5. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The frequent inspection is part of that. Between inspections, there are always little things that can crop up (some rust on a fitting clip, a tear in a rubber boot letting water in) that can, if not caught soon, lead to wearing stuff out much faster. But take a quick look every tire rotation (6,000 miles, say) and take care of any little things right away, and the big things take care of themselves.
     
  6. Mr_Raja

    Mr_Raja Junior Member

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    oh certainly. I do the tire rotation every 5k miles, and when I do that, I grab a flashlight and take a look at every component underneath the car. Looking for any leaks, tears, cracks, on the suspension and the brake components. I like to make sure all of my vehicles are going to run when needed to, and also stop when needed to. :)
     
  7. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    I go a little further with the brakes: flip up the calipers, write the pad and rotor thicknesses in the log, move all the slide pins in and out till easy and smooth (6k miles is enough for the grease to harden a little because the normal motion in braking is only .3 mm or so, but a little motion wakes it right back up), check all the rubber boots for any tears or splits, change the fitting-kit clips if the pads don't slide easily in them.
     
  8. Danno5060

    Danno5060 Active Member

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    Instead of the brakes, I'd drain the engine coolant, clean the EGR and cooler, intake manifold, throttle body, refill the engine coolant, and possibly update the engine ecu instead.
     
  9. ColoradoBoo

    ColoradoBoo Senior Member

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    For our newer cars, I prefer going to the Toyota Dealer for OEM rotors and pads. (My 2014 Tundra is almost due.)

    But for our older ones, I've found the Bosch rotors and Import Direct ceramic pads at O'Reillys to be very good.
     
  10. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Shoot on most of the generation twos I'm seeing about 190 to 214 mileage wise on the front and they don't look like they've ever been replaced these are Southern cars down here so everything's real clean all the pink and blue marks on the parts that designate whatever all that designates are clear as a bell. And they are down to the where indicators at that point too. Just because of age I slide on some aftermarket coded rotors and use some of the latest grade ceramic whatever nonsense for the pads and let it rip lube the slide pins wake up degrees whatever you do they just need to move like butter if they don't fix that now
     
  11. Eddie25

    Eddie25 Active Member

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    I went with Power Stop Evolution pads and rotors all around. I got the coated rotors and I'm glad I did because they still look good a year later. Everything's been solid so far.

    My front brakes appear to have lasted 212,000 miles, they were around 1-2mm and the rotors were not even close to out of spec, but the vanes were thoroughly rusted.

    I have had issues over the years with seizing slide pins in the rear. I got uneven wear and I actually had to drill one out at one point and have since got new calipers and I believe that's all behind me. Definitely follow Chapman's advice about getting regular slide pin movement, be prepared for a possible battle removing them if they've never never been serviced. It can be tough even just because of the rubber slide piece.
     
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  12. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk EGR Fanatic

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    There are a few gotchas with the Prius brakes. A couple:

    1. As long as the 12 volt battery is connected, there’s a chance the brake system may decide to pressurize, in particular if the drivers door is opened. You do NOT want this happening if a brake caliper is off a rotor; it can spit out its piston.

    according, especially for DIY, it’s prudent to disconnect the 12 volt battery neg cable. Leave it thus till the brakes are completely reassembled. Then pump the brake pedal multiple times, to remove any excessive travel, that might otherwise throw a code. THEN reconnect the 12 volt neg cable.

    2. The rear brake caliper piston needs to oriented a particular way, to avoid problems. There’s a link in my signature with more info. On a phone turn it landscape to see signature.
     
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  13. kc410

    kc410 Active Member

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    November 2022 I replaced the brake pads on the 2010 Prius @ 249K.
    One pad had _just_ started to touch metal-to-metal.
    I replaced with Toyota OEM pads.
    Cleaned disks, calipers, & pins with wire wheel (rust).
    Fresh lube on clean pins/boots.
    Wiped down disk with alcohol.

    I'm sure this was the first brake work as I purchased it Nov 2013 @ 100K.
     
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  14. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    The brakes on your Prius unless you really drive your car it doesn't drive you and you drive like Prius or most people that own Prius your brakes are generally never doing much of any work ever It's pretty much that simple That's why they last so long but just time can make the pads crack and things get ugly as far as looks and pieces falling off so about every 5 years especially in the south and the heat and in Texas and places like that is probably good to get the pads out of there because they're just getting old and they're not that costly so what the heck does it mean you have to change rotors and all the other stuff but you should at least slide in pads and the little stainless steel clips that the pads ride on on their ears for longer than generally most of y'all are going to keep the car.
     
  15. Mr_Raja

    Mr_Raja Junior Member

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    Well, so this vehicle is mainly driven by my 60+ years old mother in city, to and from the grocery store. Every now and then I hop in to it and drive it "normally" to make sure everything is as it is supposed to be and there are no warning lights or anything. So basically, it does not get any abuse. In the beginning it was driven a lot, but now it barely hits 5000 miles in a year.

    So what I am hearing here mostly is that dont worry about changing the rotor and pads yet, just inspect them to see if they are still good, and, as a safety precaution, remove the pins and re-lube them to make sure they are freely moving.

    @mendel lenske - Thank you for the heads-up about the "gotchas", I will keep them in mind.
     
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  16. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Yes you really shouldn't have to do anything at this mileage and what it's being driven now certainly not they'll never wear out under that kind of use or non-use if you will right now you've got to be thinking about going forward with the engine Very good chance with this little use could be a real party.
     
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  17. Mr_Raja

    Mr_Raja Junior Member

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    Just a follow up to my original post. I ended up replacing my front pads with Bosch QuietCast Pads at almost 99k miles. Looking at the OEM ones, they still look pretty good and got decent enough material left to last another 20k miles, with my estimate. The only reason I replaced them is because these pads (apparently) did not pass the MD state inspection. So there goes that. The rear pads are still in good shape (at 4mm as per the inspection), so I am holding off to replacing them. Even at 99k miles, the OEM pads lasted twice as long as any of my other pads I ever used in any of my vehicles, still a win for me. :)
     

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  18. Mr_Raja

    Mr_Raja Junior Member

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    Also, the suggestion for checking and re-lubing the pins was dead-on.

    All 4 of the front pins needed more grease, so I cleaned the old one off and added a decent layer of fresh grease, as well as added some grease inside the boots. The pins are moving way smoother than they initially did. Rotors were "suggested" to be replaced by the mechanic, but they appear to be in pretty good condition, so I am leaving them as it is for now as well, along with the rear pads. Perhaps, I will revisit them around 150k miles and see if they need any service. Unless, of course, they warp or something. The car is going to an 18 years old new driver (my nephew), so I am expecting more wear and tear than the poor car faced in its initial 9 years and almost 99k miles adventure. :D