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Parts for your 1992 Toyota Caldina-Driveshafts
1992 Toyota Caldina Driveshafts
Driveshafts are absolutely relevant on the 1992 Toyota Caldina. Toyota technical references including the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) for ST190G/CT190G Caldina (1992–1997) list left and right front drive shaft assemblies (CV half-shafts) on all models, and a propeller shaft on 4WD variants. The T19# Chassis & Drivetrain Repair Manual and Toyota New Car Features documentation for the T190 platform also detail these components. So whether it’s a front-wheel-drive wagon or a 4WD grade, the Caldina runs driveshafts.
On this model, the front driveshafts take power from the transaxle and deliver it to the front wheels through constant-velocity (CV) joints, keeping things smooth while the suspension moves and the wheels steer. On 4WD versions, a propeller shaft sends torque down the spine to the rear diff. When everything’s healthy, the car pulls cleanly with no vibrations, no clicking, and no grease flung about the guards.
Servicing is mostly about prevention. Check CV boots at regular service intervals (think every oil change) because a tiny split can quickly turn into a noisy joint. On a 30-year-old wagon, rubber boots can harden and crack with age. If a boot is torn but the joint’s still quiet and free of play, a quality reboot kit can be a smart, budget-friendly fix. If there’s clicking on full lock, shudder on take-off, or dark grease sprayed around the inner guard, it’s time to look at replacement shafts. For 4WD models, also keep an ear out for a droning or thumping under load that can point to a tired centre support bearing or worn universal joints on the prop shaft.
- Common signs of wear: clicking while turning, vibration under acceleration, clunks changing from drive to coast, torn or greasy CV boots, and play at the joints. 4WD: rumble from the prop shaft centre bearing.
- Workshop tips: use new axle nuts and circlips, and torque everything to the factory spec from the repair manual