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Parts for your 2006 Toyota Mark x-Wheel hubs
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2006 Toyota Mark X wheel hubs — what they do and how to look after them
Wheel hubs are absolutely fitted to the 2006 Toyota Mark X. This is confirmed by Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalog for the GRX12# series, the Toyota Mark X (GRX120/125) Repair Manual sections covering “Front Axle Hub” and “Rear Axle Hub,” and mainstream bearing manufacturers’ catalogues that list complete hub-and-bearing assemblies for this model. So wheel hubs are relevant and serviceable items on the 2006 Mark X.
On this Mark X, the wheel hub is the rigid mounting that the wheel bolts to, housing a sealed bearing and, in most cases, an ABS encoder. It supports the vehicle’s weight, lets the wheel spin smoothly, keeps the brake rotor running true, and feeds wheel speed data to ABS and stability control. For RWD Mark X variants, the front hubs are non-driven while the rear hubs are driven by the axle shafts. AWD versions have driven hubs front and rear. In all cases they’re sealed, bolt-on units designed for quiet, low-friction running.
Because the bearings are sealed, there’s no greasing or preload adjustment in regular servicing. What matters is inspection. During a service, a good workshop will spin each wheel listening for growl, check for play at 12 and 6 o’clock, confirm the ABS wiring isn’t chafed, and make sure the hub face is clean so the rotor and wheel sit flat.
- Typical wear signs: a speed-dependent humming that changes with steering input, noticeable wheel play, ABS or VSC warning lights, heat at the hub after a drive, and uneven brake pad imprinting on the rotor.
When replacement’s due, the best practice is to fit a complete hub assembly that matches the VIN and driveline (RWD or AWD). Pressing bearings in and out isn’t normally required or recommended for this model’s hub design. Use quality parts, protect the ABS sensor, and torque all fasteners and wheel nuts to Toyota specifications. If an axle nut is used (driven hubs), replace it with a new one as specified by Toyota. An alignment check is sensible if any suspension fasteners were disturbed.
- Aftercare tips: re-torque wheel nuts after 50–100 kilometres, road-test on a quiet surface to confirm the noise is gone, and avoid blasting the hub area with high-pressure washers.
There’s no fixed interval for hub replacement