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Parts for your 2007 Toyota Blade-Brake hose
Trojan Brake Hose Standard Rubber 3/8 inch UNF Male Male Fittings- Single Axle - TPT1037
Fitment Notes:
Trojan Brake Hose & Fittings Kit - Hydraulic Brakes Standard Rubber Single Axle Disc Brakes - TPT1021
Fitment Notes:
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2007 Toyota Blade brake hose — purpose, care, and replacement
Brake hoses are absolutely used on the 2007 Toyota Blade. Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue for the Blade (E150 platform: AZE156H/GRE156H) lists flexible front and rear brake hoses at each wheel, and the Toyota Repair Manual for Corolla/Auris/Blade (E150) details inspection and replacement procedures for “Flexible Hose” within the hydraulic brake system. Those factory sources confirm the model relies on rubber-reinforced flexible hoses to connect the hard lines to the calipers, allowing movement with steering and suspension.
On the Blade, the brake hose’s job is simple but critical: carry high-pressure brake fluid from the rigid chassis lines to the moving caliper without kinking or leaking as the wheels steer and the suspension travels. They’re built to handle heat, pressure, and road grime, but after years of Aussie or Kiwi conditions—UV, grit, and moisture—the outer rubber can harden or crack, and the inner liner can collapse, causing a soft pedal, uneven braking, or a dragging wheel.
For servicing a 2007 Toyota Blade, regular brake hose checks are smart practice. While Toyota doesn’t set a strict time-based replacement interval, age is a factor. Given the vehicle’s vintage, many original hoses are now well past a decade and are fair candidates for preventative replacement. Owners who do a lot of coastal kilometres, towing, or gravel-road driving should be even more proactive.
- Inspect at every service: look for cracking, swelling, wetness, rusted fittings, or chafe marks.
- Ensure hoses aren’t twisted after any caliper work, a twist can lead to early failure.
- Replace hoses in axle pairs (both fronts or both rears) for even brake behaviour.
- Use ADR/FMVSS 106–compliant parts, OEM-style rubber or quality braided upgrades both suit, provided they’re approved.
- Always fit new crush washers at banjo bolts and torque to spec, then bleed the system with the fluid grade specified on the reservoir cap (DOT 3 or DOT 4).
- If air may have entered the ABS modulator, use a scan tool’s ABS bleed function to cycle valves.
A 2007 Blade with fresh, correctly routed hoses and clean fluid will brake confidently and consistently. It’s a modest job that pays back in safety and pedal feel—ideal during a major service, a brake pad/rotor refresh, or before a WOF/rego check.
Does the 2007 Toyota Blade run rubber or braided hoses from factory?
From factory, the Blade uses reinforced rubber (EPDM) flexible hoses. They’re quiet, durable and designed to match Toyota’s ride and NVH targets. Braided stainless hoses are a common aftermarket upgrade that can sharpen pedal feel.
If choosing braided, make sure they’re ADR/FMVSS 106 compliant and vehicle-specific. Properly approved, well-fitted braided lines are fine for road use in Australia and New Zealand.
How often should brake hoses be replaced on a 2007 Blade?
There’s no strict kilometre schedule, but inspection at every service is expected. Replace immediately if there’s cracking, swelling, leaks, corrosion at fittings, or internal restriction (one wheel dragging or uneven braking).
Given the Blade’s age, preventative replacement around the 10–15 year mark is sensible, especially in coastal or harsh conditions. Many original hoses from 2007 are due purely on age.
What are the signs a Blade’s brake hose is failing?
Common clues include a spongy pedal, the car pulling to one side under braking, visible perishing or wetness on a hose, or a single wheel running hot because the hose’s inner liner has collapsed and is acting like a one-way valve.
Any of these signs warrant immediate inspection and likely replacement, followed by a proper bleed and road test to confirm consistent pedal and brake balance.