Tacoma starter failure at 135K miles

BajaTaco

Swashbuckler
Wow, this is the first time my trusty Tacoma would not start due to a mechanical failure that was solely a Toyota issue. (Previous three occassions were a cracked battery connector, dead battery (my fault), and a malfunctioned aftermarket ignition-kill security device, none of which left me stranded luckily). At 135,000 miles with lots of wild trips I can't complain. It is actually an item that I had somewhat anticipated could eventually happen just due to age and severe duty. The same goes for the alternator (which is still going strong, knock on wood). For the record, it is a 1998 TRD Xcab V6, in service for 9 years so far.

Now, luckily, this happened in my own driveway at home. Not hundreds of miles into Mexico or the outback of Utah or Nevada, or some such remote location. I played this out in my head as if it had happened in the field. Not so terrible to deal with I suppose. My first try would be to ********** the offending device with a hammer or rock and that will often do the trick, and it will start. If that fails, I could probably do the push-start method since I have a manual transmission (stick-shift). And if that failed (probably would work though), I could pull the starter and do a field repair by cleaning the contacts and that would likely get me on my way. Well, as I began to remove the starter, I discovered that there is a bracket for the exhaust header that is mounted just in front of one of the bolts that passes through the bell housing and secures the starter to the vehicle. In order to remove that bolt, the bracket must come off. No biggie right? Well, it is in a very tight spot and has 3 bolts securing it. One to the header flange, and two to the bell housing. The two on the bell housing came off okay. The one mounted to the header flange was a little rusty and seized pretty good, even after a treatment with penetrant.

Scott was nice enough to come over and we put his bada$$ ExtremeAire compressor to the task with an impact wrench. That did the trick. Now had I been in the field, this would have been interesting. I don't carry air tools. I likely would have had to use my dremel tool to grind the bolt off to free the bracket.

So I get the starter taken apart, and the brushes appear to have plenty of meat left on them, but the contacts are badly worn, including the disc on the plunger. So I sanded everything down and put it all back together. The truck starts fine now. I have to order the parts (small town syndrome) and will put new contacts in and it should be fine. I am considering just installing a new starter and keeping this one for a spare, but they are not exactly inexpensive.

In the case of the alternator, I carry a set of brushes/brush holders that I can swap out if necessary, and according to most cases I have seen and read about, this along with some cleaning will fix it. I will likely do this at home sometime soon and get one more set to carry as trail spares.

Anyway, just something to think about if you have a Tacoma that is getting up there in mileage. Scott and I were talking about identifying potential failures and he mentioned that it would be nice to have a database that people could contribute to. (Unfortunately, neither one of us has the time to set something like that up). What part failed at what mileage. This would give a nice point of reference on how to try and mitigate any problems in the field. My estimates of what may need to be replaced in the near future is O2 sensor(s), and alternator brushes. I have no idea how long my clutch might last, but I am considering replacing that too. But at this point, it is still strong.

Regardless, I am thrilled that my Tacoma has been so reliable. I think I will get at least a couple more years of relatively worry-free trips out of it before I am faced with the nickel-dime thing (that will make 11 years of service). During this time, I will be formulating plans for the next project vehicle.

:box:
 
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bigreen505

Expedition Leader
Lots of good points there.

I would separate the data base into failures for OEM parts, including OEM replacements, and aftermarket parts such as starters.

When formulating a spares and replacement list for an aging vehicle separate parts that are candidates for catastrophic failure and those that are not likely. For example the BajaTaco may be 8 years and 135,000 miles old, but the chance you will lose your clutch on a trip is not very high if it is not showing any signs of problems. The chance that you might lose a slave or master cylinder is much higher, so if you are worried about them it might be worth adding a master and slave rebuild kit to your spares.

There is definietly a fine line between being proactive about maintenance and O.C. about it. There is definitely a point where buying a new rig is simply a better way to go, but sometimes you are too far into maintenance hell before you realize it. I know I have been there, and this time I made the decision that I would rather put my money into another rig than do what would be the equivalent of a restoration on the Pathfinder.

Spares are something that I struggle with a bit because I would feel silly getting stuck with a broken truck and no spare, but equally silly if the vehicle is overloaded because I have a spare for everything.
 

Grim Reaper

Expedition Leader
My findings with intermittent starters on Toys have been several issues. My contacts are worn and when its cold out will hang the starter running. Have to turn the key off and back on to get it to free up.

On my Supra the Starter interlock relay (the relay that won't let you start unless clutch is pressed or its in Neutral on and auto) burned the contacts. I have also head of problems with the contacts in the actual column switch as well.

Here is a place to get the contacts for the starter. http://www.4crawler.com/4x4/CheapTricks/Starter.shtml#OnlineOrdering He makes some custom parts for Toys as well and has a lot of good tech tips.

A few additions.

22R Toyota motors...Put a timing chain in every 100k. If it fails its expensive. What actually fails more often is the guides. They will get brittle and break allowing the chain to slap the cover right up behind the water pump. When it wears through it empties the coolant into the crank case. :mad:

Engine Builder sells a timing set with a metal backed guide to prevent the wear through the cover issues. http://www.engnbldr.com/ToyotaHotLicks.htm

200k you can pretty well count on Toyota's with sealed wheel bearing needing them replaced. If you get a wheel seal leak just plan on replacing the bearing. That includes most 4x4's

Idler arm on IFS trucks is easily bent. Once it starts to bend it puts the tie rods and a sever angle and it will bind the Tie-rod ends and bend or break the drag links or tie rods. It can fail to the point where the drag link is pushed into the sump. It would be a good idea to keep one as a spare on the truck. MOOG makes one that seems stronger then the factory Toyota Unit. Autozone carries it. Swapped on the Moog and keep the used factory as a back up. Total Chaos makes a super heavy duty one for Desert race set ups.

I really don't see many other failures that are not random. Most stuff if you do regular maintenance and do a full check after each trail ride you should catch before it becomes a major problem. Water is the big killer. Check all fluids and give a shot of grease to anything with a nipple.
 

Brian894x4

Explorer
I think the starter contact and alternator brush failures would be extremely common at your mileage. I've seen Tacoma starter contacts go out with as little as 40,000 miles, but that's on a 7 year old truck. Obviously, it's the number of times the starter has been used, more than the age or mileage.

Our older trucks have the same common issue. When my starter contacts went out I just replaced them, but then for some reason still had an intermittent starting problem. I later decided to go with a Toyota rebuilt unit from the dealer and I'm glad I did. I have more peace of mind about it now.

As for the alternator, this another item that you really don't want to fail. While brushes can just be replaced, the problem is that the brushes usually go out after 130-150K miles and while new brushes might last that long, you have other issues like worn bearings and worn copper contacts that brushes touch (can't remember what it's called) that really should be replaced at the same time. In other words, if the brushes are worn out and it's just a city car, then I would save the bucks and replace the brushes. But for an expendition rig, I'd rebuild the entire alternator. If you can't do this, a good local alternator shop can and usually for not much more than $100. You might be able to pick up a really cheap chinese knock off rebuild for the same price, but I'd a want a good OEM, rebuilt part doing that very important job.

Since we're on the subject one area that I'm wondering about is how long my fuel pump will last. My truck is 17 years old and has well north of 200K miles on the original pump. You don't hear of EFI fuel pump failures very often, but a new part is spendy and a pain to change out, so I've been debating whether I should just chance it or buy a new part. I do carry a wrecking yard spare, but I sure don't look forward to having to install it in the middle of nowhere if it were needed.
 

erin

Explorer
I had fuel pump problems on my 89Toy. Apparently, when I bought it, it had low miles, but this was due to the fact that it sat alot of its early life with an empty tank in Wisconsin. So, needless to say, the tank was horribly corroded and all the gunk clogged the boot filter and burned out the pump. So it was replaced with OEM part, which was fun, and exactly 367 days later it also burned out. Lucky, I was able to strong arm Toyota into a new one, but with no warranty. So, even with OEM parts, there is never a guarentee.

As far as starters, never a problem, but I think I went through 3 factory alternators in around 250K. But I have talked to alot of people who experienced the same thing, so it seemed like a common problem.

Even though both are a pain if they fail in the field, at least Toyotas don't have many failures across the board as some vehicles do.
 

RAM5500 CAMPERTHING

OG Portal Member #183
Hey Chris

80's have a similar known problem as well.

Toyota actually sells a $25 starter rebuild kit that included a new plunger and contacts. I did mine about 4k ago and it was simple.

Check here for info: http://www.george4wd.taskled.com/starter.html

p.s. not sure on the taco, but the 80 starter contacts/plunger can get stuck when they are worn and can cause quite a mess!
 

VikingVince

Explorer
Chris,

Interesting you should mention the O2 sensor. I just failed my CA smog test because of a bad O2 sensor on my '98 Tacoma (147K miles). Repair at Toyota dealer: $270 labor, $170 for the part. (I could have done it myself - JOKE!) Water pump was leaking and was replaced at about 135K miles. The dealership noticed the water pump during my major tune-up before the big EP Baja trip.
I thought starters often gave an indication that they were going bad.????
 
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cruiseroutfit

Well-known member
My contact went around 120k, I've seen them go in rigs from 80-200+k. Good thing is they are cheap and easy to fix... I've considered carrying spares, but usually they give some sort of indicator they are going. Hindsite, for the $15 worth of parts, I'm going to toss a set in the toolbox.

As for what I have had to replace on my Tacoma:

Waterpump/timing belt - routine maint.
Front output seal - leaking @ 120k
Driveline carrier bearing - bad @ 140k
Rack/Pinion Unit - bad @ 150k
 

Ursidae69

Traveller
BajaTaco said:
So I get the starter taken apart, and the brushes appear to have plenty of meat left on them, but the contacts are badly worn, including the disc on the plunger. So I sanded everything down and put it all back together. The truck starts fine now. I have to order the parts (small town syndrome) and will put new contacts in and it should be fine. I am considering just installing a new starter and keeping this one for a spare, but they are not exactly inexpensive.

I've never taken a starter apart before, this is all foreign to me. Are there tips on taking one apart in case we have to do it in the field someday?
 

RAM5500 CAMPERTHING

OG Portal Member #183
Ursidae69 said:
I've never taken a starter apart before, this is all foreign to me. Are there tips on taking one apart in case we have to do it in the field someday?

Put a sheet or similar thing down and DONT LOOSE ANYTHING! Or then that, its fairly simple! :sunflower
 

Desertdude

Expedition Leader
Chris, Good report and a nice reminder of what spares to carry - sometimes starter ( and alts for that matter ) can go prematurely bad due to certain voltage drops to the contacts - Considering the starters job -135K does not seem to bad in the long run
 

Seeker

Adventurer
BajaTaco said:
Anyway, just something to think about if you have a Tacoma that is getting up there in mileage. Scott and I were talking about identifying potential failures and he mentioned that it would be nice to have a database that people could contribute to. (Unfortunately, neither one of us has the time to set something like that up). What part failed at what mileage. This would give a nice point of reference on how to try and mitigate any problems in the field.

This sounds like an excellent idea. A Wiki might be a good way to go on this. It would allow the members to publish articles and then be edited by other members, with all approvals funneling through the staff(?).

Judging by what I see in my browser debugger, there are any number of freely available Wiki frameworks that could work. It also keeps with the open forum theme quite nicely.
 

Jonathan Hanson

Well-known member
Thanks for the report, Chris. Our starter is still going strong at 160,000 miles, but perhaps it's time for me to rebuild it, especially considering we have an automatic transmission.

At this mileage we have yet to have any mechanical failures! I replaced the timing chain/water pump at 125,000 miles as regular maintenance, and also the steering box tie rod ends at 150,000 miles, as they were loose.

IIRC, aircraft have well-documented service lifespans for major components, which must be replaced at half that expected life or something similar. It would be great to have a database like that for vehicle components.
 

BajaTaco

Swashbuckler
Thanks to everyone for their input, experiences and suggestions. Based on my inpsection of my starter when I took it apart, and after talking to Toyota of Dallas (TRDParts4U.com) and getting their opinion based on what they sell (one of the largest Toyota parts inventories), I decided to just replace the contacts and the plunger on the starter. I just got the parts. So after I get the parts installed, I will post some before/after pics of all this stuff, and part numbers so others can reference it.

My next target is the alternator.
 

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