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Tundra Brakes on '03 Tacoma

Discussion in '1st Gen. Tacomas (1995-2004)' started by TACO in SC, Sep 19, 2012.

  1. Oct 31, 2020 at 10:52 AM
    #141
    turbodb

    turbodb AdventureTaco

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    The O'Reilly definitely has some surface rust on it compared to the Napa caliper but that doesn't bother me since it's only a visual thing and I'm over on the west coast and don't have to worry all that much about rusty stuff. If it did, I could just hit it with a bit of caliper paint.
     
  2. Nov 1, 2020 at 1:31 PM
    #142
    reallifeonhold

    reallifeonhold Well-Known Member

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    Good to know, thanks. And, certainly no difference as far as your hard line kit is concerned, right?
     
  3. Nov 1, 2020 at 2:11 PM
    #143
    turbodb

    turbodb AdventureTaco

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    None at all.
     
  4. Nov 6, 2020 at 7:18 PM
    #144
    reallifeonhold

    reallifeonhold Well-Known Member

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    If anyone is considering doing this upgrade in the near future, it's a good time to pick up parts at Napa. They're giving 20% off if you buy three or more items and a promotional tool bag.

    Calipers, brake fluid and the tool bag:

    Tundra Brake Parts Receipt2.jpg
     
    turbodb likes this.
  5. May 22, 2021 at 6:27 AM
    #145
    hondamxracer

    hondamxracer Well-Known Member

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    When upgrading to the Tundra calipers, do I need to switch to Dot 4? Truck calls Dot Dot 3 on the reservoir lid.
     
  6. May 22, 2021 at 6:41 AM
    #146
    Dalandser

    Dalandser ¡Me Gustan Las Tacos-mas!

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    They’ll both work.
     
  7. Jul 31, 2024 at 1:09 PM
    #147
    MatthewMay1

    MatthewMay1 I'm an amateur professional.

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    I’m going to revive this old thread to ask a question. 2001 truck with 13WL non-ABS.

    Of course I’ve had these brakes in my truck for many years…I don’t drive my Tacoma very often anymore but my friend just bought a 2004 Tacoma so I took mine out of the garage to drive it over to check out his new truck. Holy crap. His brakes are way firmer and all stock. I’m starting to think maybe I should change the booster out? I have a 2001 and from my re-reading of this thread it seems like the pre-01 boosters have a single diaphragm and result in a firmer pedal feel? My pedal seems to behave like others have mentioned. First press is very spongy and second press firms up. Of course, I will re-bleed the entire system before throwing parts at it. Is there a consensus as to which master cylinder/brake booster provides the optimal pedal feel?
     
  8. Jul 31, 2024 at 1:29 PM
    #148
    ChargedSHOTaco

    ChargedSHOTaco Well-Known Member

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    I have a 2001 (non-ABS) with the 13WL calipers and stock master and brake booster, and the pedal is a firmer at first press, and begins to grab at the very top of the pedal. I've had the spongy pedal after initial install, and even considered removing the 13WL calipers altogether, but that changed after using a pressure bleeder and tapping the calipers with a rubber mallet while bleeding to dislodge any trapped air bubbles in the caliper. I probably bled the brakes 10 times using the 2-man method, before I decided to get a pressure bleeder.
     
  9. Jul 31, 2024 at 1:30 PM
    #149
    turbodb

    turbodb AdventureTaco

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    Bleed your brakes and make sure the rears are properly adjusted. Nearly everyone who thinks they need a different MC just don’t have the rears grabbing soon enough. (Thus requiring extra pedal travel.)
     
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  10. Jul 31, 2024 at 1:31 PM
    #150
    Nano909

    Nano909 Stirrer Of Pots

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    You've got to bleed it some more. You already have the better BMC/booster on there.
     
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  11. Jul 31, 2024 at 1:34 PM
    #151
    MatthewMay1

    MatthewMay1 I'm an amateur professional.

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    Thanks for the report.
    My rears should be properly adjusted. I remember going down a drum brake rabbit hole a while ago.
    Bleeding more is my current plan. Was just curious if any decision was made as to which is the optimum combination of booster and MC. By your report, I have it.
     
  12. Jul 31, 2024 at 2:06 PM
    #152
    Nano909

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    What process did you use to bleed last time?
     
  13. Jul 31, 2024 at 2:32 PM
    #153
    MatthewMay1

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    Looks like by a post I made in this thread years ago, I went rear pass, rear driver, BPB, front pass, front driver. Lots of opinions on when to throw the BPV in the mix
     
  14. Jul 31, 2024 at 2:56 PM
    #154
    Nano909

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    I'll tell you how I did it and it works for me. I always bleed my brakes this exact way on all my vehicles and I've never had a single issue.

    Looks like I told you 4 years ago LOL
    Do it that way. Start with the LSPV.
     
  15. Jul 31, 2024 at 3:26 PM
    #155
    MatthewMay1

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    Right on. It may not have been touched in the past 4 years so that may be my fix. I kind of parked the truck and forgot about my projects I was doing on it.
     
  16. Jul 31, 2024 at 4:12 PM
    #156
    Nano909

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    Use this opportunity to empty out the reservoir and use fresh DOT3 or DOT4 fluid. Open the valve on the LPSV and keep pumping til you start seeing fresh fluid. Keep an eye on the reservoir so you don't accidentally pump the brake pedal with it empty.
     
  17. Jul 31, 2024 at 6:11 PM
    #157
    Dalandser

    Dalandser ¡Me Gustan Las Tacos-mas!

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    Is your booster a double or single diaphragm? Been developing a list of what comes with what over the years and options.
     
  18. Jul 31, 2024 at 6:36 PM
    #158
    ChargedSHOTaco

    ChargedSHOTaco Well-Known Member

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  19. Aug 14, 2024 at 8:00 AM
    #159
    japedu

    japedu Well-Known Member

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    i've been researching the bleed sequence with my setup, and every time i think i've found the a convincing answer i trip across some new recommendation. i have a 98 with ABS, and did the 13wl upgrade with adventure taco's hardline kit, and installed a LPSV (somebody had removed it) when i replaced the rear suspension. stock MC and booster. in one of the other threads a few folks were very convincing about going PR, DR, LSPV, DF, PF for my setup. then i saw a timmy the toolman video about bleeding a 3rd gen 4R, and he stated the LPSV should be done last per the FSM. seems like he's as reliable a source as i could hope for, but i looked in my FSM, and it only mentions bleeding based on distance. now i also see to bleed the LPSV first above. not really sure why i'm posting this, but i haven't had great brakes since purchase and don't have a great sense of what to expect from all this work. i just want to get the best results possible, and seems like bleed sequence should be a straightforward thing. i know i'm not necessarily helping this convo, but it's a more frustrating topic than i expected.
     
  20. Aug 14, 2024 at 10:50 AM
    #160
    Parkvisitor

    Parkvisitor Do you know midnight?

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    stuff
    I had a low pedal after installing the tundra brakes, all bled correctly, then I properly adjusted the rear brakes and installed a lspv relocate bracket, also cleaned and lubed all the lspv hardware, now I have a high pedal and great braking.
     
    Last edited: Aug 14, 2024
    ChargedSHOTaco likes this.

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