Just noticed this rubber boot on drivers rear wheel assembly seems to be leaking lubricant...
(http://img.tapatalk.com/d/14/05/17/paqy6u6a.jpg)
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Excuse the noobish question, I know its not the CV boot, is this the UJ boot?
Is it a big job to get fixed?
Inner cv.boot is mot failure, if you are experienced with spammers not a big job but you need circlip pliers. Replacement kit from Toyota is £60, generics don't fit.
Okedoke, her MOT is due soon and an oil change, might just do it all at once at the garage.
Quote from: "Wabbitkilla"Inner cv.boot is mot failure, if you are experienced with spammers not a big job but you need circlip pliers. Replacement kit from Toyota is £60, generics don't fit.
Ever tried the stretchy boots ?....they will fit most diameters,saves taking the joint apart as well....never used them on a 2 but they don't look much different to any other car.
This place is listing a specific inner boot for £12.20
m http://www.expressfactors.com/Single-Pa ... Page=PARTS (http://www.expressfactors.com/Single-Part.aspx?PrevPage=PARTS) m
Like I said generic boots won't work, believe me I've worked on these. See those three scallops in the body of the joint? The Boot needs to match those to fit. The Toyota ones have the rubber shaped to fit them.
do NOT use a generic boot - my ex garage did and a year later the cv joint destroyed itself and cost me £800 for a new drive shaft (and I was lucky).
I have asked CTP to quote for the part so I can supply it to whoever will to do the labour. Appreciate the advice on that!
Quick question if any of you lot have done the job before yourselves - the boot is filled with grease to keep the drive shaft lubed properly, guessing i have to top up the grease when i replace the boot? Any ideas what you use?
This sort of thing m http://www.halfords.com/webapp/wcs/stor ... yId_165705 (http://www.halfords.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/product_storeId_10001_catalogId_10151_productId_246319_langId_-1_categoryId_165705) m s:) :) s:) or you can get it from local motor factor.
Usually the boots come with a small sachet of the right grease or they did in the past, just enough for the CV joint.
Norman
Good to know Norman, ill ask CTP if there any included.
Thanks for the link, Kaeo, will be useful if there isn't s:) :) s:)
Quote from: "Wabbitkilla"Replacement kit from Toyota is £60, generics don't fit.
Ford Mondeo ones do!
I changed both my O/S CV boots, and my local MF told me they are the same boot for both ends of the shaft. They are not. They told me the outer was actually now different and out of stock. I played hell with them, and they matched the old boot to a Ford Mondeo one. Same size half-moon, fit is perfect.
Just putting it out there....
A bike puncture repair kit is a lot cheaper and easier. Obviously it's a temporary fix but that been said, it's a temporary fix that had been good for the last 14,000 miles on mine. s:P :P s:P
I have the MrT replacement boot on its way (grease included).
Quote from: "p3t3"Just putting it out there....
A bike puncture repair kit is a lot cheaper and easier. Obviously it's a temporary fix but that been said, it's a temporary fix that had been good for the last 14,000 miles on mine. s:P :P s:P
An interesting idea I hadn't thought of, and I will bear it in mind as an option if I can't get her to garage as soon as I'd like next time. Personally, I would rather spend tens of pounds now and be pretty confident I won't have to shell out hundreds later if things go wrong, than spend pennies now, forget its only a temporary fix and have no reassurance my drive shaft will be happy some miles later. Personal preference I guess s:) :) s:)
That and I'm saving my puncture repair kit for a sneaky softtop repair providing I can get some spare roof fabric soon to test glue durability out on...
It is coming up to Easter so time for a resurrection.
My 2, PFL 2002 on 62500 miles is showing a leakage of grease from the same place as JK' s.
The boot looks to be intact and the seepage ( perhaps a tea spoon full with what is in the under tray) seems to have oozed from between the boot and the joint on the major diameter/ inside end.
I believe the clip could be tighter than it is, it seems to have a kink which gives under finger pressure.
The advice above suggests that a new boot from Mr T is the proper way to go for a replacement boot but it would seem that the CV joint clip is all that is needed in this case and a proprietary item is available from the bay c/w setting pliers.
Any previous experience or suggestion to share would be appreciated.
Quote from: "Joesson"It is coming up to Easter so time for a resurrection.
My 2, PFL 2002 on 62500 miles is showing a leakage of grease from the same place as JK' s.
The boot looks to be intact and the seepage ( perhaps a tea spoon full with what is in the under tray) seems to have oozed from between the boot and the joint on the major diameter/ inside end.
I believe the clip could be tighter than it is, it seems to have a kink which gives under finger pressure.
The advice above suggests that a new boot from Mr T is the proper way to go for a replacement boot but it would seem that the CV joint clip is all that is needed in this case and a proprietary item is available from the bay c/w setting pliers.
Any previous experience or suggestion to share would be appreciated.
If you're sure it's a loose clip, then your solution will do fine. When you've got the old clip off, peel the boot back and clean out as much of the old grease as you can (it's usually emulsified and looks like dirty cream). Re-pack with black graphite grease.
The after market clips are a bit tricky the first time you use them. Get it bent to as close to the right diameter as you can and squeeze it as tight as possible with your hands (so it's already snug) before putting the pliers to it.
Thank you for that Carolyn.
Would Mr T' s clip be any easier to fit?
The existing clip is flat with no indication of pliers being used , so maybe a factory thingy.
Whatever I use it will mean acquiring the tool to fit as well as the clip.
My first thought was a Jubilee type clip but I guess that is not typically used for a good reason.
You can buy the tool along with the clips. There's nothing wrong with the after market ones.
m http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/CAR-ATV-FITS- ... 1893453867 (http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/CAR-ATV-FITS-99-OF-VEHICLES-CV-BOOT-CLAMPS-PAIR-X-2-EAR-PLIERS-/111893453867) m
I buy the bands in lots of ten....
Thanks again, this time for the reassurance, I saw these on the bay but was unsure of the " quality"
QuoteCarolyn wrote:
I buy the bands in lots of ten
I guess you' ve done this job a few times!
m http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/331322977344? ... EBIDX%3AIT (http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/331322977344?_trksid=p2060353.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT) m
(Just in case).
I've lost count of CV boots.... they're on bloody everything!!
QuoteJust in case
What could possibly go wrong?!
Thanks again.
Quote from: "Carolyn"http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/331322977344?_trksid=p2060353.m1438.l2649&ssPageName=STRK%3AMEBIDX%3AIT
(Just in case).
I've lost count of CV boots.... they're on bloody everything!!
Is this a tried and tested blueprint boot?
My driver side inner CV boot is spraying grease and it's a pre facelift. Would this fit?
I used one like it on my car. (I'm pretty sure it was this one, but it's been a while). The boot has the half-moon bits that fit in the grooves on the CV casing. If in doubt, measure your drive shaft and casing.
Quote from: "Carolyn"Quote from: "Joesson"It is coming up to Easter so time for a resurrection.
My 2, PFL 2002 on 62500 miles is showing a leakage of grease from the same place as JK' s.
The boot looks to be intact and the seepage ( perhaps a tea spoon full with what is in the under tray) seems to have oozed from between the boot and the joint on the major diameter/ inside end.
I believe the clip could be tighter than it is, it seems to have a kink which gives under finger pressure.
The advice above suggests that a new boot from Mr T is the proper way to go for a replacement boot but it would seem that the CV joint clip is all that is needed in this case and a proprietary item is available from the bay c/w setting pliers.
Any previous experience or suggestion to share would be appreciated.
If you're sure it's a loose clip, then your solution will do fine. When you've got the old clip off, peel the boot back and clean out as much of the old grease as you can (it's usually emulsified and looks like dirty cream). Re-pack with black graphite grease.
The after market clips are a bit tricky the first time you use them. Get it bent to as close to the right diameter as you can and squeeze it as tight as possible with your hands (so it's already snug) before putting the pliers to it.
We were away last week and will be next week but meanwhile ordered the clips and pliers and today I removed the old clip, peeled the boot back and the " grease" just ran out and you were right about the colour.
It will be after Easter now before I get the new grease and repack and fit the new clip.
I guess that the thinner emulsified oil is why the joint leaked out as the boot seal is designed to hold in a viscous grease, so was lucky/ shows what a good look around can find, before the joint dumped all the thin gunk and terminated.
Will see what sort of mess I get in repacking the joint and if not too bad will likely repack the other joints sooner rather than later.
I' m supposing the other joints will be in a similar condition and that preventive/ preemptive maintenance will extend the life of the joints.
Yep - do them all...
My understanding is that I clean out the old gunk as best I can and " bearing" in mind the joints are in situ I then " fill" the bearing with the new stuff. I have an old Wanner grease gun that I could use or perhaps a plastic bag with a corner removed, like an icing bag. Or is it a case of fingers are best?
Whichever way I do it I don' t think it will be pretty!
Rubber gloves and fingers for me. Don't stuff it too full. Half grease, half air. Get as much of the old stuff off the joint as you can and slap plenty of grease on it.
Grease is rarely pretty.
Thanks for that Carolyn.
I now have about ten days to get the grease, some more clips and prepare myself for the fun.
Anyone else reading all this with Frankie Valli playing away in their head?
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MOD edited the title to something more useful!
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Can I revisit this please? Just failed MOT on inner nearside CV boot split. The garage (not the ones who MOTd it) are going to sort it, rough quote £60. He asked me if the gearbox was sealed, the honest answer is I don't know.
Anyone more mechanical know the answer? Otherwise looks like I'll need another 2l of gearbox oil too.
Quote from: Bossworld on May 7, 2019, 13:08
Can I revisit this please? Just failed MOT on inner nearside CV boot split. The garage (not the ones who MOTd it) are going to sort it, rough quote £60. He asked me if the gearbox was sealed, the honest answer is I don't know.
Anyone more mechanical know the answer? Otherwise looks like I'll need another 2l of gearbox oil too.
It will let oil out of the passenger side once the shaft is out.
Have them drain the box, collect the oil, and put it back in!!! (Unless it's been in there for many thousands of miles...)
Quote from: Carolyn on May 7, 2019, 13:12
Quote from: Bossworld on May 7, 2019, 13:08
Can I revisit this please? Just failed MOT on inner nearside CV boot split. The garage (not the ones who MOTd it) are going to sort it, rough quote £60. He asked me if the gearbox was sealed, the honest answer is I don't know.
Anyone more mechanical know the answer? Otherwise looks like I'll need another 2l of gearbox oil too.
It will let oil out of the passenger side once the shaft is out.
Have them drain the box, collect the oil, and put it back in!!! (Unless it's been in there for many thousands of miles...)
Thank you C much appreciated.
Yes they offered to do that, clutch was only changed last summer/4000 miles ago. Hopefully it's a relatively straight forward removal, I just haven't got time at the minute (kids, house rennovation) to try and look into it.
Thought I'd come back to this - two weeks (and 30 miles later), I came to change the shocks and noticed grease around the cv joint. The boot also looked to have slipped.
Long story short, the garage were very good about it, took it back in this morning, had another boot delivered by 11am and had the car finished early this afternoon, under warranty from the previous boot change. Their supplier had originally advised that the generic boot was correct - as per pictures/advice on this thread, can confirm that's not really the case - there are three notches in the proper boot (or copies there of) as mentioned earlier on in the thread.
All sorted now at least.
Digging up an old thread... any current recommendations where to source an appropriate inner CV boot?
TCB? MR2ben?
Or Your local Toyota parts dept.
Toyota even seem to have an Ebay page. might even be toyota parts direct of something.
Edit
https://www.ebaystores.co.uk/ToyotaOfficialStore
if not listed. Submit request.
A bit of research suggests that BluePrint manufacture the correct tri-lobe boot. Part number is ADT38187.
https://partsfinder.bilsteingroup.com/en/article/blueprint/ADT38187?make=Toyota&model=MR2+1984+-+2007&vehicle=MR2+%28ZZW30%29+1.8+16V
Available from eBay, Amazon, AUTODOC etc.
I've ordered from a company called winparts as they were well priced and promise fast despatch. We'll see...
Out of curiosity do you happen to have the difference in price
There also this from Febest...
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/BOOT-INNER-CV-JOINT-KIT-77-8X94X21-7-Febest-0115-090/124112554348
Febest 0115-090
Quote from: Ardent on July 23, 2020, 10:14Out of curiosity do you happen to have the difference in price
Between the different suppliers?
My local motor factors = £25 each
eBay and Amazon = circa £17 each
AUTODOC = £10.50
Winparts = £8 each (plus £10 p&p)
All listing the same make/part number. I'm hoping that it's a rare enough item that there won't be fake/knock off items out there.
Previous posts suggest Toyota want circa £60 each so I didn't bother phoning them.
Quick update on this.
The delivery from Winparts arrived today and... they're spot on. Correct part and great quality.
The only downside is that they took nearly a week to arrive and comms weren't brilliant. Website said parts would be dispatched the next day but they weren't sent until 4 days later. Would use again if I have time to spare.