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Installing MOOG rear shims to correct camber and toe

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

  1. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    This is my adventure in DIY rear shims for my Gen 3 Prius. First time I've gone in deeper than wheels on the rear end.

    I'll fill in blanks later. At the moment I am working on getting the rotor off.

    Just learned from another thread: the bolt holes are M8x1.25 ... need a couple of 1" or longer bolts. Hmmm...

    I've tried several other methods, and have some penetrating spray working on it (while we watch the Super Bowl - Go 49ers LOL)... but I may need something stronger and those two bolts seem the safest reliable solution.
     
    #1 MrPete, Feb 11, 2024
    Last edited: Feb 11, 2024
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  2. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Are they really that big I thought they were M6 but I could be wrong I've never needed to use bolts to extract the rear rotor If you need spray some AeroCroil into those bolt holes they are just going to screw you against the hub face the threads of the bolts that you thread in so just give a shot of Aero kroil or PB blaster if you need to. Tap w hammer dead blow type it will rattle loose .
     
  3. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    Found a spare M8x1.25 bolt.

    I tried lots of other things first:
    * PB blaster
    * hammer whacks
    * my fancy heat gun

    Nothing.

    That little bolt? Turned it in until it stopped. Another fraction and there was a loud clunk as the connection let go on one side. Did onthe other hole and voilà all done!

    It's worth the 50 cents to get this done reliably in seconds
     
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  4. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk EGR Fanatic

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    This is to loosen the rotor? The bearing removal “fun” still ahead?
     
  5. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    I should have explained better. I used a large punch and 5# hammer to smack
    the sides of the hub to rotate it back and forth to brake it free, as I sprayed the
    rust penatrant around it and move it so I could use the bolt from behind to put
    pressure on the hub.
    Then when I smacked the hub it would vibrate out a little each time. 2 bolts seem
    to work better because of even pressure.
    Either way it's a lot easier and faster than all the other ways I've seen.

    Grease is "ok", but the antiseize is best. You'll be glad you used it the next time
    you have to change them! (y) Or at least the next person will be. :whistle:

     
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  6. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Yes there's two bolt threaded holes for a reason You use them in unison's to push out on the thing gently evenly somewhat Y'all must be in rust states or something because all I have to do is unbolt the five wheel stud nuts pull off the wheel knock the caliper bracket loose and I can kick the bottom edge of my rotor with my keen shoes and the rotor will fall off and land hot down on my foot every time I do have aftermarket rotors installed on the back of both of the Gen 3's but that shouldn't make any difference what we don't have here is lots of rust and salt so that makes parts kind of fall off the car One of the reasons I live in this area.
     
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  7. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    Yep! Unfortunately I broke my 14mm 3/8 in sockets... time to go get some 1/2 inch drive extensions.

    And yes, @Tombukt2 we live at 7,000 feet in Colorado. Very sunny but also snow, ice and mud.
     
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  8. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    You need snap on sockets....

     
  9. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    Or my brain turned on. Using a 30 year old junk 3/8 inch socket was just dumb. (I could tell stories about other dumb things I've done with brain off ;) ). And this only minutes after noticing that my 1/2" flex breaker/torque wrench was reading well over 100 ft-lb even on removing a few of the wheel nuts. :LOL:

    I have a set of reasonably good 1/2 in Harbor Freight sockets. Nary a problem to date up to almost 200 ft-lb.

    I just did a search and found generic advice on sockets/drive max torque (which obviously depends a lot on quality: 1/4 in = 60 ft-lb max; 3/8 in = 100 ft lb max; 1/2 in anywhere from 150 to 250 or even 500 if incredibly good.

    OK, my reality does NOT match your description. What am I misunderstanding?
    • The layers involved here: solid axle beam, then thin brake dust shield, then wheel bearing/hub assy, (then rotor but that's off)
    • I got out the bolts that hold the hub/bearing to the axle (just spin the hub to the right point and use a good extension.)
    BUT there's no way I can reverse the bolts and put them in from the back side!
    • For two, the axle beam pipe completely covers the bolt hole
    • For the other two, there IS an access hole, but...
      • The top-rear one, yep can get the bolt started. If I had a longer bolt it would be fine. But the bolt head hits the axle tube before I can sink it in far enough.
      • The lower-rear one, the edge of the access hole interferes with the bolt head. No way to even get started.
    I can see the value of approaching this. If I could get the specs on those hub bolts maybe I could get/find a longer one and use it- on at least two of the positions to get things started. It's 90119-A0350

    My other creative stupidities:
    1) No need to loosen the hub right away. I can spin the dust shield a bit, and put pressure on THAT from behind... at least somewhat.

    2) Use hub bolts in original position to force hub off of axle beam:
    • Reinstall two of the hub bolts part way
    • place a 2x4 or whatever between bolt heads and the wheel hub (with lug bolts still there)
    • use socket wrench to loosen bolts, forcing wheel hub away from the axle beam mount. (Of course that might simply rip the hub apart as well, costing me even more :( )
     

    Attached Files:

  10. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    You need longer bolts. If you take one to the hardware store they can
    match it with a thread gauge, or a nut. Then get a longer bolt.
    I believe I just kept rotating in left/right and rust penatrent until I could
    get a chisel behind the hub on either side and just kept going back and forth.
    I just didn't feel like going to the store.

    I am way to antique to be fighting this stuff so I find the easiest way to do something.
    Less physical stress, less mental stress.

     
  11. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    I found a MUCH better way. No hammering, no chisels, no prying. I'll explain briefly now, but I need to finish up this job... then will share photos and more!

    What you need (about $3 of hardware is all):
    • Two big "hex tap bolts" aka Fulll Thread Hex Bolts. You need threads along the entire shaft. More than 3 inches long... I used 4 inch 3/8 x 16
    • Two nuts to match (me: 3/8 x 16)
    • Two matching washers plus 2-4 thick fender washers -- I used 1/2 fenders, which are about 1 1/2 inch diameter.
    For now, just imagine:
    • Choose two of the "outer" (away from car body) holes in the hub.
    • In each, assemble: hex bolt into the hole. Between the outer hub and the base (actually resting on the brake dust guard) thread... the larger fender washers first (up against backside of hub), then the smaller washer, then a nut.
    • Spin the nut as far as it goes toward the hex head, and rest the tip of the bolt against the dust guard, NOT the bearing base.
    • Set the up on two opposing sides (it won't be perfect because there are five not six holes... but close enough.
    Now, grab one of the nuts with an adjustable wrench, and use an impact wrench on the hex head to turn it in (clockwise).
    • First round just tighten it, then tighten the other one
    • Then, go back and forth a couple of times only a few turns at a time
    • No fuss, no muss. In seconds the bearing/hub will come free! :)
    • (I did punch a hole through the dust shield with one of the bolts. I am not at ALL concerned about that :)
    Now I'm ready to finish up.
     
    #11 MrPete, Feb 12, 2024
    Last edited: Feb 12, 2024
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  12. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    ugh! MORE work! Have at it....


     
  13. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    LOL. Took longer to write than to do ;)

    Now I have a new "Ugh." NONE of the shim templates are correct.

    In addition, it isn't obvious what the zero (straight up) angle is supposed to be.
    • I did some measurements of how much the rear axle shifts from "normal on road" to "hanging w/o wheel"... and get ~5 inches. That appears to translate to a 4 degree adjustment.
    • BUT, then what?
    The good news: the brake dust shield makes a rather nice template. It's flat where it counts, and it's easy to trace the four bolt holes and center hole for the hub. So I do know the relative angles of the bolt holes (67, 137, 233, 303 -- all +/- 7 for a range of 14 degrees...)

    I have a guess at my own template... but before moving forward I sense I should call MOOG tech support in the AM, to see what they have to say.
     
  14. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    OK, reassembly time at last.

    Discovery (yes I was warned in the instructions...) Need a bit of caliper shim to avoid binding, since the caliper is mounted on the solid axle, not the hub. (Thus, it is affected by adding a shim!)... Looks like stainless steel washers will do the trick.

    QUESTIONS
    • I don't find a spec anywhere for how closely the rotor needs to be centered within the caliper. As long as there's no binding, does it not actually matter? (If true, then I'm imagining the brake shoes simply ride along w/o any issues.)
    • Mendel's 2010 brake instructions include some bits that I'm not finding at all, such as anti-squeal springs. Mine has no such thing. Is that truly a nothingburger, or did a service person leave something important out?
    • I see the spec for the rotor is 9mm start, 7.5mm replace. Mine are at 7.9mm with reasonably new shoes. AFAIK I have the original rotors, and have gotten 230k miles in 1.1mm of wear (9-7.9). If so, then in theory I can get almost 90k more miles before the rotor must go. Am I thinking right, or am I crazy? ;)
    • The repair guide says the brake pad support plates are NOT the same, and should be marked to put them back in the right place. I didn't mark... and can't see any difference. Did I mess up royally?
    And now for Brake Pad Questions. I've never looked at brake pads before... and am seeing things that don't make sense to me.

    1. One of the two pads has an attached metal spring. Now I see that's for the inside pad. No idea why it is different???
    2. I'm a bit confused about how pad thickness is measured. Is it the entire thickness of the pad (not including removable outside bits?
    3. My pads appear to have a trapezoidal wear surface, that slowly increases in size as it wears, becoming a more rectangular surface for the last 2/3 of its life. Is that normal? Seems it would change the braking characteristics over time...
    2024-02-14 11.25.35.jpg
     
    #14 MrPete, Feb 14, 2024
    Last edited: Feb 14, 2024
  15. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    Got the second wheel, rotor, hub apart in a few minutes. Having the right tools and methods sure helps!

    One more question: this hub makes some noises when I turn it. Bad... or let it go? No wobble at all. I'm now comfortable pulling and replacing the hub another time if/when needed.
    https://youtube.com/shorts/FUWO3UumIUc
     
  16. Danno5060

    Danno5060 Active Member

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    Wyoming here, so similar environment. Maybe a little less salt, but what they call cinders.

    Pulling the bearings for me has been a destructive process. I've got my techniques down that are similar to yours, or at least start out that way. It's usually a race between whether I get the bearing to come out first, or the hub comes apart. At this point, I'd replace the bearing/hub assemblies. The first indication that you need new ones is they start making noise.

    Sand out the rust in the rear axles and apply anti seize before putting the new bearings back in. After a few months, I wouldn't count on it making much of a difference, but if you need to remove them anytime soon, it will probably be a big help.

    As to the brake pads, if it's what I think you're talking about, the spring thing is the wear indicator. It starts rubbing on the disc, it makes a squealing sound when the pads get worn down past the point you should be replacing them. It's not a perfect monitor for your brakes, just something that gives you an indication for normal brake wear. The thickness is for the friction material only, it does not include the metal backing plate. Yes, that shape is normal.

    As to the rear wheel alignment. How far out were you when you measured it? What was wrong? There is no such thing as a perfect alignment, and even if there were, speed bumps, potholes, and curbs would change that in a hurry. The best we can hope for is within tolerances.

    If it were to be out of tolerance for some reason (like a collision), I'd start by ordering a salvage rear axle/subframe - probably from southern California instead of shims - but that's what I'd do. It's your car, do what works for you.
     
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  17. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk EGR Fanatic

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    Yeah you should have v-spring pieces; push into little holes in the pad edges, help pull the pads away from the rotor slightly. Not sure how critical they are. Dealership should have them. They're sold in a package here:
    Rear disc brake caliper & dust cover for Toyota Prius XW30, 3 generation 01.2009 - 11.2011 - Toyota Car and Auto Spare Parts - Genuine Online Car Parts Catalogue - Amayama
    Pad thickness does not include backing plate.

    If this is the first time opening up the rear brakes, be careful with piston orientation when reassembling. There's a link in my signature about rear brake drag. On a phone turn it landscape to see signature.
     
  18. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    They are bad, replace both of them.

     
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  19. MrPete

    MrPete Active Member

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    All assembled! Thanks for the various reminders. (One brake piston was a proper "X"... the other was offset... and looks slightly dinged as if someone servicing got it wrong at one point :( )

    Everything was acting nice and free... until I finished reassembling. Now, I did NOT do anything special to fully retract the piston. Could that be why (before I do any test drive) it has some brake friction?

    Before reconnecting battery, I *did* do the brake pedal pushes and parking brake activations. Yet spinning the wheel is noiiiisy.

    I thought I saw the need to do some special actions on first turn-on, but can't find it.

    Any ideas?
     
  20. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    Did you replace the noisy hubs??? If not, you will get noise when you spin the wheel.
    Did you replace the brake pads? If so, did you us the special too to FULLY retrack the puck?
    Did you use Toyota pads, or aftermarket pads? Reading on Pruis Chat, several of the aftermarket
    pads tend to be thicker then the OEM pads.

    Since you changed the angle of the hub, the disc will be at an angle when you install the caliper.
    So the pads will wear at an angle, and could make noise until they are worn in. And/or the disc
    could be rubbing on the caliper. Also, the puck andcaliper will be at a strain and could cause it to fail.

    Lastly, you said you damaged the dust shield, if it's also bent, it could be rubbing against the rim.