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Parts for your 2004 Toyota Hiace-Centre bearing
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2004 Toyota Hiace centre-bearing: what it is, whether yours has one, and how to look after it
Referencing Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) for late H100 and early H200 Hiace models, plus the Toyota Repair Manual driveline section and common aftermarket catalogues used in AU/NZ workshops, the 2004 Toyota Hiace is typically fitted with a centre support bearing when it has a two-piece tailshaft (most long and super-long wheelbase variants). Some short wheelbase vans run a single-piece shaft and won’t have a centre-bearing. A quick look under the van will tell the story: if there’s a carrier bracket and rubber-mounted bearing supporting the tailshaft mid-way, it’s fitted.
When fitted, the centre-bearing’s job is to support the two-piece tailshaft, keep everything running true, and soak up vibration so the van stays smooth on take-off and at highway speeds. It carries the shaft centrally while allowing just enough movement through its rubber isolator to handle load changes and suspension travel. On a working Hiace that spends its life loaded or towing, the centre-bearing is a quiet hero for driveline comfort and longevity.
There’s no set replacement interval, so it’s worth treating the centre-bearing as a service inspection item. Each service, check the rubber support for cracks or separation, spin the shaft and feel for roughness, and look for red dust or fling that hints at internal wear. Road-test clues include a rumble that rises with road speed, a shudder on take-off, or a clunk as the load comes on and off the throttle.
If replacement’s needed, it’s a straightforward workshop job but benefits from care:
- Mark the tailshaft flanges and yoke before removal to keep phasing and balance correct.
- Press the old bearing off