Skip to content Skip to navigation menu

Your Selected Vehicle

Brands

Price

Parts for your 2010 Isuzu D-max-Brake hose

Sort by
Showing 40 - 46 of 46 products

2010 Isuzu D‑Max Brake Hose

Technical sources confirm the 2010 Isuzu D‑Max uses flexible brake hoses. The Isuzu D‑Max 2008–2012 Service Manual (Brake System) and the Isuzu Electronic Parts Catalogue for 2010 list flexible front and rear brake hoses for this model, and both NZTA VIRM inspection guidance and Australian Design Rule 31/03 reference flexible hydraulic brake hoses as part of the braking system. A brake hose is therefore fitted and fully relevant to the 2010 Isuzu D‑Max.

On the 2010 D‑Max, brake hoses connect the rigid chassis brake lines to the moving components at each wheel. They allow suspension travel and steering movement while carrying high‑pressure brake fluid to the calipers and rear wheel cylinders. Typically there’s a flexible hose at each front wheel and a centre hose to the rear live axle, with short hard lines across the axle to each side. Their job sounds simple, but they’re absolutely critical for safe, consistent stopping—on bitumen, corrugations, or with a tray full of gear.

Hoses live a tough life. Age, heat, UV, flexing, road grime and salt can all take a toll. Issues can include surface cracking, swelling of the inner liner (causing a dragging brake), leaks at crimped fittings, or chafing where a hose touches a guard or control arm. Any of these warrant immediate attention.

  • Signs to watch: wetness around fittings, visible cracks, bulges, kinks, or rub marks
  • Driving symptoms: spongy pedal, pulling to one side, a brake that won’t release cleanly

Good servicing practice is to inspect every hose at each service. Clean the area and flex the hose gently while looking for fine cracks, check that clips and brackets hold the hose away from sharp edges, and confirm there’s no contact at full lock or bump. Brake fluid should be replaced at the interval shown on the cap/owner’s manual (commonly every two years in AU/NZ), which also helps hose life.

When replacement’s due, choose quality, ADR‑compliant parts. Fit new copper sealing washers at banjo bolts, never twist the hose during installation, and don’t let a caliper hang by the hose. Bleed the system correctly (including ABS procedures) and road‑test for a firm, even pedal. Many owners consider braided stainless hoses for a firmer feel