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10-21-2011, 01:35 AM | #1 |
Drives: Yaris Sedan 2009 Automatic Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Oakville, Canada
Posts: 12
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Carbon Buildup = Fuel Injection Flush???
I have a Yaris 2009, automatic transmission, and i am at 90,000 km on it. Went for check-up (maintenance every 16k and it cost 120$ and includes oil change), and they tell me I need the following:
1) Brake Fluid Flush = 100 $ (ok I do have ABS, maybe i do need this???) 2 a) Fuel Injector Efi Flush = 175 $ 2 b) Throttle Body Service = 50 $ (no idea what this means) 3) Air Filter change = 60$ (did it myself for 20 $) There is carbon buildup, and toyota service is telling me i need to the the Fuel Injector Flush and the Throttle Body Service, all of which i have no idea what it is, and i dont see it in the service manual as a requirement. I have always been using cheap gas (87oct) and never tried any additatives, and always getting oil change by Toyota (ie no idea what kind of oil i am getting). Pls guide me on what i should do. I am not mechanically inclined, but want to start learning being more independant. Last edited by zfarsh; 10-21-2011 at 12:52 PM. |
10-21-2011, 07:05 AM | #2 |
Drives: yaris 08 sedan Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Montreal Canada
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Sounds to me like your dealer wants to make some extra cash at your expense..
I would forget about the brake flush,the fuel injector flush,and the throttle body service as they are all unnecessary.. The lower octane gas has all the quality of the higher octane gas,its just formulated to detonate at a different temperature and is what the engineers designed the car to run on.. At this point you may want to search for an honest private mechanic as he will be much cheaper than the dealer and not try to sell you stuff you dont need..
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10-21-2011, 07:47 AM | #3 |
Well answered.
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10-21-2011, 10:13 AM | #4 |
Drives: old truck Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Adirondacks
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I've never heard of flushing out the brake lines or anything else other than the radiator but it's not a bad idea to drain/refill all the fluid's about every 60k.Same goes for steering,tranny and transfer case fluids.At least that's what's recommended in the maintenance section of my Chilton manual.
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10-21-2011, 10:45 AM | #5 |
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Flushing the brake fluid once in a while is not a bad idea, since brake fluid is alcohol based and tends to absorb water, which makes it way down to the calipers and corrodes them.
To do so only costs the price of a container of brake fluid and only takes a couple of minutes to do. You basically keep the fluid reservoir topped off, while bleeding all four brakes until what comes out looks like what you are putting in.
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10-21-2011, 11:15 AM | #6 |
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always flush the brakes at 60,000 or later
the danger is corroded brake lines or sudden lockup brake fluid absorbs water over time, and if too much builds up, and the brake fluid gets hot (which it does all the time), a tipping point can be reached where a tiny bubble of steam will form in the brake line and lock your brakes suddenly in the middle of hard braking, sending you off a cliff. rare, but real. |
10-21-2011, 12:52 PM | #7 |
Drives: Yaris Sedan 2009 Automatic Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Oakville, Canada
Posts: 12
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ok, thanks guys. One thing i forgot to mention is that is it automatic transmission. I am a bit confused about all this, as there are different answers.
However, I am guessing the Brake Fluid might not be bad because of the ABS (but it is not in the maintenance manual, so i wasnt 100% sure, and I am a newb). Still waiting to hear more responses. Now, it looked complicated doing it myself from what i have seen in pictures / videos, but will relook at that and see if i can find it for a yaris. Anyways, the 100$ brake fluid is not that huge. However, what is huge is the Fluid Injector Flush and the Throtling Body Service. They say there is carbon buildup and it is recommended i flush these out and do the maintenance at 89,000 km. I know Jambo101 said i dont need it. Would like to hear a bit more on this subject, and why i dont need or why do i need it. What is this issue anyways. Again, I have never started using additives yet to my fuel (some say it is good, others say it is bad), and dont know if this will remove the carbon build-up, and i dont even know if carbon build-up is serious and needs to be addressed quickly. Again, would appreciate your thoughts and detailed reasoning. Has anybody been told this by the dealer / mecahnic before? |
10-21-2011, 01:48 PM | #8 | |
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Quote:
The fuel injector and throttle body cleaning are really likely to not be needed. If the throttle body had significant carbon deposits you would notice the engine running a bit rough. The same basically goes for the injectors. Don't let them talk you into doing a fluid change on the automatic transmission either, unless it is on their nickel. Things like these are how the dealer makes serious money on service. After my father retired from his engineering career, a friend of his that owned a car dealership convinced him to be the service manager. My father went back into retirement in less than a year because he refused to "play the game" of constantly trying to sell people services that their cars didn't need.
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10-21-2011, 02:38 PM | #9 |
Drives: Yaris Sedan 2009 Automatic Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Oakville, Canada
Posts: 12
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Hi CTScott, thanks for the response, just curious what you meant by the following:
"Don't let them talk you into doing a fluid change on the automatic transmission either, unless it is on their nickel. " Do you mean the Transmission Fluid Flush? If so, i was on the impression that this required to be changed at around 100,000 km as per the manual, for a automatic transmission car. Isnt the life time for that fluid about 100k? Pls let me know as i was going to get that done at my next oil change visit in 8,000 km. |
10-21-2011, 02:51 PM | #10 | |
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Quote:
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10-21-2011, 02:55 PM | #11 | |
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Quote:
how does it run now ? obtain 2 bottles of either Chevron Techron, or BG44K, (--no other brands or types !!--) and run 2 tanks of gas through the Yaris, one bottle a tank. make at least some 50 mile trips on those runs... does the Yaris run better ? it should run a bit smoother. |
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10-21-2011, 03:41 PM | #12 |
Drives: Yaris Sedan 2009 Automatic Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Oakville, Canada
Posts: 12
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CTScott: Oh wow, i thought it was supposed to be changed at 100,000 km, not 100k miles!!! that is a huge difference. I see i have the wrong maintenance menu, for a Toyota 2006 Yaris, not a Toyota 2009, so I will have to find it for that. However, the Toyota Service center has however provided their schudule for Yaris 2009, and it says that at 96,000 km, i should replace the Automatic Transmission Fluid. I may have to start calling a couple of Toyota Service Centers to get this cleared up. The second change of transmission oil is indicated at 192,000 km.... I am wandering if we are getting screwed in Canada with the numbers.
A-Dino-Eat-My-Baby: : Thanks. Ok, so how does it work. Fill up one bottle for a filled tank. Do about 50 miles or more, then put another bottle, or wait for tank to be half full, fill it up, then add the second bottle? Not sure when to use second bottle. |
10-21-2011, 05:59 PM | #13 |
Drives: 2007 Toyota Yaris Sedan Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Chilliwack, BC Canada
Posts: 59
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Hi zfarsh
For the automatic transmission fluid change, the problem is what Toyota Canada says and what Toyota in the U.S. says is two different things. In the Toyota Owner's Manual Supplement (page 23) its says "Replace transmission fluid every 72 months/96,000 Km". In the Toyota Owner's Manual (page 284) it says "Generally, it is necessary to change automatic transmission fluid only if your vehicle is driven under one of the Special Operatiing Conditions listed in your Owners Manual Supplement". These are (page 24): 1. Short trips of less than 5 Km ( or 8 Km in temperatures below 0C). 2. Trailer towing or frequent mountainous driving. 3. Driving on dusty or muddy roads. In the U.S. Toyota TSB dated June 28, 2007 it says (page 2): 100,000 (mile) Maintenance interval - inspection only. ATF-WS does NOT require any flushing or changing during the life of the vehicle. (I don't have access to the American Owner's Manual). So I can understand why you are confused on this issue. And why you would get a different answer from our American friends. Good luck with your decision on this. Roy |
10-21-2011, 08:45 PM | #14 |
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^Ah, that does explain it. Toyota believes that all of your Canadians are crazy drivers.
The reality is probably completely centered around marketing. In the US it is a huge plus to sell a car that requires no maintenance for 100,000 miles.
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10-22-2011, 07:15 AM | #15 |
Drives: 2008 5 Door Liftback Auto Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Canada
Posts: 157
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Throttle body service is a good thing because it does indeed get dirty. If you feel your mileage is not what it used to be that'd be the first thing I'd try. My 08 has barely 25k on the clock and the mileage was pretty bad until I cleaned the tb. How bad? How about 24 mpg (used to get that with V6 accord). The carbon build up was obvious when I took the tb out.
Same experience with my Prelude, mileage went up noticeably. 50$ for that seems reasonable.
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10-22-2011, 07:44 PM | #16 |
Drives: 2011 yaris rs Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: vancouver b.c.
Posts: 93
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I would definitely go for the brake fluid flush. Water vapour in the brake fluid can corrode your brake sysytem with more expensive repairs in the future.
The charge for the air filter is too much. Should always do yourself if you can. Also if you can top up your fluids before taking it in for service you can save yourself "shop charges" for the fluids. |
10-22-2011, 11:07 PM | #17 |
Drives: Yaris Sedan 2009 Automatic Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Oakville, Canada
Posts: 12
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Hi Yuri. For the Throttle body job that is 50$, i wouldnt have minded if this was done alone, however, the service center is telling me they cannot do that unless they do the Fluid Injector Flush which is 175 $ on top of the 50$.
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10-25-2011, 01:49 PM | #18 |
Drives: Yaris Sedan 2009 Automatic Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Oakville, Canada
Posts: 12
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so guys, living in Canada and having driven 90,000 km, should i (or when should i) do the Fuel Injector Flush and the Throttle Body, to remove the carbon buildup and whatever else benifit it may give, at 175 $ + 50 $ (no, i am not rich, far from it), or should i try the Chevron Techron method? Will this remove the carbon build-up...is it even bad to have the carbon build-up?
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