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Rear Shock Replacement - Tips and Notes

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by The Critic, Jan 21, 2013.

  1. cnc97

    cnc97 Senior Member

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    2010 Prius
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    Three
    So the question I have after seeing the video above, what was done on the rear shock that necessitates the need for an alignment? I didn’t see anything that would have required one.

    BUT, having a car with lunar miles, I know it’s not a bad idea to have it checked. I’m just trying to understand why the video includes that recommendation. Maybe because they know that most of the time cars have lunar miles when you finally get the shocks changed??
     
  2. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Nothing is adjustable on the rear anyway? Unless you resort to shims.
     
  3. ErstwhileCabbie

    ErstwhileCabbie New Member

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    II
    I had a mechanic friend do the front and rear struts a few months ago and I helped him do it. I had ordered kyb struts for the rear and kyb assemblies for the front. He never read any of the instructions on any parts and didn't torque anything to spec. I seem to remember him re-using the rear strut covers and maybe discarding the boots? Anyways, I had a pic of the rear mount and noticed it looks different from the kyb video on this thread. The metal ring is on top instead of the black rubber piece. Is it worth it to try to correct this? The ride was great for first 5k miles and now it's still better but not quite as nice. Could this be part of the problem? I was thinking of ordering replacement kyb sm5840 mounting components. Can i replace this top mount stuff without removing the strut? Also, is it worth it to try to make sure the boot was installed underneath? Screen Shot 2021-09-29 at 12.40.18 AM.png
     
  4. Wes_33073

    Wes_33073 Junior Member

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    Just finished this job on my Gen3 (2013) Prius. Some notes:
    - For the lower bolt, do NOT tighten it until it's back on the ground. Once on the ground, bounce the car a few times and then tighten the BOLT, not the nut. 66 foot pounds.
    - The top bolt/damper can be accessed without removing all the trim on later Gen3 models. There's a little access panel, very convenient.
    - When torquing the top bolt (18 foot pounds) it's almost impossible without an extension tool. Remember to re-calculate based on extension tool length to avoid over-torquing (see attachment)
    - For the top bolt, Toyota spec calls for 1324 adhesive / threadlock. This is almost identical to Loctite BLUE.
     
    Mendel Leisk likes this.
  5. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Touring
    The tip about having the car on the ground and settled before torquing caught my eye. And yeah, that's what they say in this Repair Manual excerpt:
     

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