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Rear Brake Vibration When Braking

Discussion in '1st Gen Tundras (2000-2006)' started by Jon2005SR5, Jul 11, 2025 at 2:03 PM.

  1. Jul 11, 2025 at 2:03 PM
    #1
    Jon2005SR5

    Jon2005SR5 [OP] New Member

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    I have a 2000 SR5 4x4 with the 4.7.

    The problem I’ve been having is a really bad vibration coming from the rear along with the brake pedal pulsing when I apply the brakes. I know it’s the rear because when I’m going down a stretch of road and I lightly apply the parking brake the truck begins to shake.
    I never had this problem until I got my parking brake working and properly adjusted.

    Things I’ve done to attempt to fix the problem and their results:

    I assumed it was a problem with the drums being out of round so I bought and installed brand new power stop brake shoes and Rabestos drums. I reused the hardware as it was in good shape.
    This unfortunately did not solve the issue In fact it made it worse.

    In response to this I took off the drum flipped it around on the hub and used spare lug nuts to secure it. I then used a magnetic base dial indicator to measure the runout of each drum. The passenger side had 0.005” and the driver side had 0.025”. I also preformed this test on the old drums and they had 0.020” and 0.025”.

    After discovering my brand new drums were worthless I packed them up and returned them and had the old drums turned on a brake lathe.

    I reinstalled the old but freshly turned drums the problem seemed to go away during the test drive and the drive to work the next morning.

    However, on my way home from work the vibration and pulsing of the pedal started to come back. At first it was mostly in the pedal and now it still shakes the truck but not nearly as bad.

    I am completely stumped on what else could cause this problem and was hoping someone more knowledgeable than me could maybe point me in the right direction.
     
  2. Jul 11, 2025 at 2:06 PM
    #2
    shifty`

    shifty` We call it “riding the gravy train”

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    Any sound associated?

    When was the last time you bled the brakes?

    When you bled the brakes, did you also bleed the Load Sensing Prop Valve ("LSPV"), mounted on the framerail, above the axle?

    Not that I think air would be the issue, but asking. My first suspect was out of round drums, but you had the old drums turned. My next suspect would be either the spring kit used or wheel cylinders, Aisin makes OEM replacements.
     
  3. Jul 11, 2025 at 2:55 PM
    #3
    Tunrod

    Tunrod New Member

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    I had the exact problem on a First Gen Tacoma after I changed out rear brake shoes and drums. Truck vibrated badly on braking and isolated to rear by applying parking brake. I didn’t do a run out check on drums as they were brand new (Rock Auto) but I did put a dial indicator on axle hubs and found the left was way out, same wheel someone crashed into wife long ago. I took it to Meineke and told them about the brake problem and what I found and to change out the axle.

    They called a few hours later and asked where I got the drums from and that they were trash and the truck was fixed. When I picked up the truck the vibration was still there but not nearly as bad, and after a couple of weeks it was completely gone. Like the rear shoes bedded into a sweet spot or something?
     
  4. Jul 11, 2025 at 5:26 PM
    #4
    Dblock500

    Dblock500 New Member

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    I recently had the same vibrations from my rear brakes even with new drums, shoes, and wheel cylinders. My problem was rear drums weren't OEM and were out of round probably out of the box or soon after. I know you got your old ones turned, but I'd recommended throwing OEM on there (maybe wait for the next sale on online Toyota parts from a dealer with free shipping, I used Serra Toyota was about 100 or so per drum shipped). This is what solved my issues with the whole truck vibrating and pedal pulsing when coming to a stop.
     
    The Black Mamba likes this.
  5. Jul 11, 2025 at 6:16 PM
    #5
    Jon2005SR5

    Jon2005SR5 [OP] New Member

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    No sound that I can hear.

    I bled the brakes right before I put on the first set of drums I got.

    I don’t know if this is relevant but the reason I bled them was I had a axle seal and wheel bearing go bad on the passenger side, so I had the axle shaft out for a week because I had to weld up the special bearing puller.

    I did bleed the LSPV and both rear drums but not the front calipers, I don’t remember what order but it was according to whatever your post about brake bleeding said.

    I haven’t changed the wheel cylinders but I can’t believe they’d cause a vibration like this.
     
    Last edited: Jul 11, 2025 at 6:43 PM
  6. Jul 11, 2025 at 6:21 PM
    #6
    Jon2005SR5

    Jon2005SR5 [OP] New Member

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    I am dreading this is the solution.

    I just spent $50 on getting these drums cut. And I know I’m being cheap but I find it hard to spend $100 per drum.
    To me that’s just ridiculous.
     
  7. Jul 11, 2025 at 6:22 PM
    #7
    Jon2005SR5

    Jon2005SR5 [OP] New Member

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    That’s one thing I forgot to check while I had the wheels off the other day, whenever it stops raining here I’ll check and see if my axles shafts are bent.
     
    Last edited: Jul 11, 2025 at 6:43 PM
  8. Jul 12, 2025 at 1:38 AM
    #8
    Tunrod

    Tunrod New Member

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    I'd give it a week or two and see it it goes away ... the only reason I took it to a shop was because at the time I didn't have the equipment to change out the axle and I thought that was the problem. OEM parts may have prevented the entire situation, but ya, OEM pricing on common maintenance items is ridiculous. Lessons learned.
     
  9. Jul 12, 2025 at 3:27 AM
    #9
    The Black Mamba

    The Black Mamba A pure specimen of TX Black Snek

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    Yeah, the old ones lasted 25 years. $200 to get another 25 years out of them does seem absurd :boom:
     

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