After using a syringe to remove and refill the reservoir, can you turn the car off, put on a brake pedal depressor and use the bleeder nut to drain the lines?
There is a "fluid replacement procedure" given in the repair manual that you can follow without needing a scan tool. Toyota Service Information and Where To Find It | PriusChat I think a bunch of existing threads here describe it. Best to follow that procedure. Keep in mind that a job is only "fluid replacement" if there is no air in the system to start with, and if you take total care the reservoir never gets too low and no air gets in while you're replacing. Otherwise, it becomes an "air bleeding" job, and there isn't a no-scantool procedure for that.
FWIW; hopefully you disconnected the battery before you sucked the brake fluid out of the reservoir. The system does periodic testing and if the brake test was triggered while it was empty; it would've sucked air into your brake system. This isn't an old simple hydraulic brake system; there's a pump and ecu atttached to it.
I’ve done a couple of non-Techstream brake fluid replacements; it’s a straightforward procedure, works. Some links, tips and repair manual excerpts in my signature. Worthy of note: the parking brake must be applied for the “invalid mode” to activate. (on a phone turn it landscape to see signatures)
you need to put the car into invalid mode to bleed the rear brakes since it’s controlled electronically. The fronts you can bleed the brakes conventionally by having the car off and pumping the brake pedal and hold and opening the bleeder valve.
When there's no air in the system (you just want to do "fluid replacement") that works ok. "Bleeding" (which traditionally means "getting air out") is more complicated: the actuator has multiple fluid pathways (for normal use and for fail-safe use), with electronically-operated valves between them, controlled by an ECU. Attempts to do what you'd do to bleed your grandpa's brakes don't get the air out of all the places, except when you're using the scan-tool bleed procedure that operates the valves at the right times.
I recently tested the brake fluid on my 14 year old 2012 Prius v. I used both the Phoenix dip strips and the moisture test light. The strip show no degradation and the light showed no moisture. I was going to have my dealer bleed and change the fluid, but now found that it isn't necessary.
Should be no air at all in the system. I'll disconnect the battery, suck out and refill the reservoir, then simply drain while keeping the fluid in the reservoir topped off.
Well good luck. There is a Toyota sanctioned process, Techstream not required, battery left connected, car put in “invalid mode”.
Post 7... Georina...14 years and no moisture degradation/ absorption to the brake fluid? Is there more to the story? Toyota caliper piston design, reservoir cap quality the best, for examples? I am just "blown away" by the 14 yr time span
No issues. I has a 1998 Mazda that show no degradation in the fluid when measured with the Phoenix dip strips that I traded in in 2016. Brake fluid degrades only in two ways. It is hydroscopic and absorbs moisture or becomes acidic. If none of the two occurs, it's just fine. Since Brake fluid does not affect EPA mileage ratings, factory recommended 24 month replacement is a big money maker for dealers. On the reverse, extended oil changes save manufacturers money when they are included free with a new vehicle purchase and is a good selling point for those not wanting to be bothered with having to take the car in to be serviced. The free oil change represents an opportunity to sell more services to the dealer. Long oil change intervals result to high engine wear and sludge. By that time when those conditions occur, the warranty has expired. It's another opportunity to sell the owner a new vehicle.
Unfortunately, unscrupulous dealers can use the dip strips with falsified results to sell a brake fluid flush, especially when it is recommended in the owner's manual. The dirty cabin filter scam made by displaying a dirty filter not even from the owner's is a common scam to sell an overpriced replacement. That's the main reason to do your own tests.
I do see that. I've also seen the video by the Car Care Nut, where he uses a vacuum pump. I found it amusing when he said the Toyota dealers don't use the Techstream process. I just bought the vacuum pump and brake fluid tester off Amazon.
How come? The Repair Manual has a non-Techstream method, for brake fluid replacment. It's worked fine for me. No need for vacuum pump; just an assistant to push brake pedal.
This way you disengage the battery, so there's no need tor a 2nd person. I am a lone eagle in car repair at my house.
If you’ve got neighbours with teenage kids it’s an easy hour’s work. Put the car in invalid mode, go by the book, is my advice. Basting and replacing coolant in reservoir before you start is a good ploy, not mentioned by Toyota. Also good to have the 12 volt battery on a maintainer, for the duration, since the car is “on”, but not in “ready”.