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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Ist-Wheel hubs
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2006 Toyota ist wheel hubs — what they do and how to look after them
Based on the Toyota Electronic Parts Catalogue for the NCP6# series, the Toyota repair manual procedures for “Front Axle Hub” and “Rear Axle Hub,” and mainstream bearing catalogues from NTN/NSK/Timken covering the ist/Scion xA platform, wheel hubs are absolutely fitted to the 2006 Toyota ist. The front end uses a splined hub supported by a sealed double‑row ball bearing in the steering knuckle, and the rear rides on a bolt‑on hub unit (drum or disc variants) with an integrated bearing and, where equipped, an ABS tone ring.
On this compact city hatch, the wheel hub’s job is simple but critical: it’s the mounting point for the wheel, it keeps the tyre running true, and it transfers drive (front) while supporting the vehicle’s weight with minimal friction. Because the bearings are sealed, there’s no periodic greasing—service is about inspection and timely replacement when wear shows up.
Typical warning signs the 2006 ist’s wheel hubs need attention include:
- A dull humming or growl that rises with road speed and may change when cornering
- ABS light on (often from a damaged or rusty tone ring on hub units with ABS)
- Disc brake pad knock‑off or a faint steering shimmy from bearing play
- Heat at the hub after a short drive or roughness when spinning the wheel off the ground
For routine servicing, a quick check every 10,000–15,000 kilometres is smart: spin each wheel, feel for roughness, and rock it at 12 and 6 o’clock to detect play. If there’s noise or movement, replace the affected hub/bearing promptly—letting it go can chew out tyres, stress the CV joint (front), or upset ABS behaviour.
Fronts on the ist are typically serviced by pressing the old bearing out of the knuckle and installing a quality sealed bearing, then pressing the hub into it, some workshops will fit a complete hub and bearing sub‑assembly when available. Rears are generally a bolt‑off/bolt‑on hub unit. Always torque the axle/hub fasteners to factory spec, renew any single‑use nuts and cotter pins, and keep the magnetic encoder (ABS) clean and oriented correctly. Choose reputable bearings and seals—cheap units often drone early and don’t love Australasian heat and coarse‑chip roads.
A tidy road test after fitting—quiet straight‑line running, no play, no warning lights—finishes the job nicely.
Popular questions about 2006 Toyota ist wheel hubs
1) How long do wheel hubs last on a 2006 Toyota ist?
With decent roads and quality tyres, many owners see 120,000–200,000 kilometres from factory hubs. Fronts tend to wear sooner than rears due to drive loads. Rough chip surfaces, frequent kerb hits, or cheap bearings can shorten that window noticeably.
If one side fails, the opposite side may not be far behind, so some workshops will inspect both fronts together and quote options accordingly.
2) Can the front wheel bearing be replaced separately from the hub?
Yes. On the 2006 ist the front uses a pressed‑in sealed bearing that can be replaced on its own with a press and the right drifts. Many technicians still prefer a quality bearing kit and new hub if the old hub is pitted or scored, as that helps the new bearing last.
Rears are usually supplied as one bolt‑on hub unit, so they’re replaced as an assembly.
3) What happens if a noisy hub is ignored?
The noise generally grows louder, then play develops. Left long enough, heat can damage the knuckle, rotor or drum, and ABS signals can go flaky. In worst cases the bearing can seize, which is no one’s idea of a good time under the bonnet or on the highway.
Sorting it early is cheaper, safer, and kinder to tyres and brakes.