youcanrunnaked
Member
At last service (5K miles ago, at 46K miles) my dealer’s service advisor said our 2021 Tacoma TRD OR needed brakes. They work fine, so I assume he meant the front pad material was getting to the service limit. (He didn’t mention the rear brakes, specifically.) This would be the first brake service from new.
He quoted a price that I don’t remember but seemed high. When I questioned it, he explained that with “these trucks” they recommend replacing pads and rotors at the same time. When I asked about turning the rotors, he said they don’t recommend it, because when they’ve done it their customers complain about vibration when braking.
I thought this advice was excessive. My understanding is that if you keep ahead of brake pad wear, when you replace pads you inspect the rotors and if they look fine, pads alone is fine; if the rotors are scored or cruddy, you can cut the rotors (1 or 2x, depending on original rotor thickness and how much turning is necessary), which is less expensive than replacing them. So my questions are:
Is it always necessary to service or replace the rotors when replacing worn brake pads?
Are the third gen brakes prone to vibrate if the rotors are turned? Or am I being hustled?
How much should the necessary service cost?
As for the rear brakes, I have no idea. It’s been a long time since I owned a car with drumbrakes. How long do the rear brake shoes generally last?
What does servicing the rear brakes consist of and what should that cost?
Oh, and what about changing the brake fluid?
He quoted a price that I don’t remember but seemed high. When I questioned it, he explained that with “these trucks” they recommend replacing pads and rotors at the same time. When I asked about turning the rotors, he said they don’t recommend it, because when they’ve done it their customers complain about vibration when braking.
I thought this advice was excessive. My understanding is that if you keep ahead of brake pad wear, when you replace pads you inspect the rotors and if they look fine, pads alone is fine; if the rotors are scored or cruddy, you can cut the rotors (1 or 2x, depending on original rotor thickness and how much turning is necessary), which is less expensive than replacing them. So my questions are:
Is it always necessary to service or replace the rotors when replacing worn brake pads?
Are the third gen brakes prone to vibrate if the rotors are turned? Or am I being hustled?
How much should the necessary service cost?
As for the rear brakes, I have no idea. It’s been a long time since I owned a car with drumbrakes. How long do the rear brake shoes generally last?
What does servicing the rear brakes consist of and what should that cost?
Oh, and what about changing the brake fluid?