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Parts for your 1989 Toyota Hilux surf-Brake hose

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1989 Toyota Hilux Surf Brake Hose — What It Does and When to Replace It

Yes, the 1989 Toyota Hilux Surf is fitted with flexible brake hoses. This is confirmed by Toyota’s Repair Manual for the 4Runner/Hilux Surf N130 series (Brake—Flexible Hose inspection and replacement procedures), the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for LN130/VZN130 (front and rear flexible brake hose listings), and the Haynes Toyota Pick-up & 4Runner 1979–1995 manual, all of which show flexible hoses connecting the hard lines to the front calipers and the rear axle plumbing.

On this Surf, brake hoses are the flexible rubber lines that let hydraulic brake fluid move from the rigid chassis pipes to the moving bits: the front steering knuckles and the rear live axle. They’re essential for keeping solid pedal feel and consistent stopping power while the suspension articulates on- and off-road.

For servicing, it’s smart to give the brake hoses a solid look-over at each service interval or at least every 10,000–15,000 km. Age, heat, UV, mud, and road grime can make hoses crack, swell internally, or weep at the crimps. Any of that is grounds for replacement. If the ute feels like the pedal’s spongy, one wheel drags, or braking pulls to a side, a tired hose can be the culprit.

Replacement is straightforward for a competent home mechanic, but it’s brake safety gear—so no cutting corners. Use proper flare nut spanners, cap the lines to reduce fluid loss, and always fit new copper or alloy sealing washers on banjo fittings. Torque to the spec in the Toyota manual and route the hose correctly with clips and anti-twist tabs aligned. After refitting, bleed the system thoroughly with the correct fluid (DOT 3 or DOT 4 per Toyota’s spec) and check for leaks under pressure.

As a rule of thumb, many workshops in Australia and NZ recommend replacing rubber brake hoses around the 10-year mark regardless of kilometres, sooner if there are signs of damage or if the vehicle sees heavy towing or off-road work. Braided stainless hoses are a popular upgrade for pedal feel