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Parts for your 2004 Toyota Wish-Pedal pads

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2004 Toyota Wish Pedal Pads — What They Do and When to Replace

Based on Toyota technical sources — including the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC) for the ZNE10/ANE10 series and dealer service literature of the 2003–2009 Wish — this model is fitted with a removable rubber pedal pad on the brake pedal. Manual-transmission variants also use a clutch pedal pad. The accelerator is typically an integrated plastic/metal tread and doesn’t take a separate pad. Parts listings widely used in the trade (e.g., OEM Toyota EPC–derived catalogues) corroborate the presence of the brake and, where applicable, clutch pedal pads.

The pedal pad on a 2004 Toyota Wish is a small, grippy rubber cover that sits over the metal pedal plate. Its job is simple but vital: deliver secure foot traction, dampen vibration, and help the driver modulate braking (and clutch operation on manuals) with confidence in the wet or dry. When the pad hardens, cracks, or goes smooth and shiny, grip drops off — and that’s a safety risk as well as a likely fail item at a WOF/roadworthy.

As part of regular servicing, it’s worth giving the pads a quick once-over. Look for:

  • Glazed, slippery surfaces or polished edges
  • Cracks, splits, or chunks missing
  • Pad that’s loose on the metal pedal

Replacement is an easy, low-cost fix that most owners can DIY in minutes. Park on level ground, switch off, and apply the park brake. Pull the old pad off the pedal plate, starting at a corner. Warm the new pad in hot (not boiling) water to make it supple, then hook the top lip over the pedal and roll it on. Make sure it’s seated evenly all the way around so it can’t slip underfoot.

When cleaning, avoid silicone dressings or anything oily — they look tidy but ruin grip. A mild soap solution and a soft brush keeps the rubber clean without making it slippery. If the Wish is an auto, you’ll just have the brake pad to worry about