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Parts for your 2015 Toyota Crown-Wheel bearings
Penrite High Temperature Wheel Bearing Grease 450g Cartridge - HTGR00045
Fitment Notes:
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2015 Toyota Crown wheel bearings — what they do and when to service them
Wheel bearings are absolutely relevant on the 2015 Toyota Crown. The S210-series Crown runs sealed hub unit bearings front and rear. That’s confirmed in Toyota’s Crown Repair Manual (Suspension & Axle sections for Front Axle Hub and Rear Axle Hub) and Toyota’s Electronic Parts Catalogue, which list complete hub-and-bearing assemblies rather than serviceable tapered rollers. OE bearing suppliers for this platform (e.g., Koyo/JTEKT, NSK) also specify unitised, sealed bearings, meaning they’re designed to be replaced as an assembly when worn.
On a 2015 Toyota Crown, the wheel bearings carry the vehicle’s weight, let the hubs and wheels spin smoothly, and feed clean speed signals to the ABS/vehicle stability system via the integrated tone ring. Being sealed for life, they don’t need greasing, repacking, or preload adjustments. Servicing is about inspection: during routine maintenance or a WOF/safety check, a tech will listen for humming or growling that rises with road speed, feel for play at the wheel with the car lifted, and watch for ABS warnings or uneven tyre wear. If there’s noise or looseness, it’s time for a hub unit.
Replacement is straightforward but precise. The Crown’s hubs are a bolt-in (rear) or press/bolt-in (front, depending on subvariant) assembly. Because the bearing and hub are built together, they’re swapped as one piece, don’t try to repack them. Go for quality OE-spec units, clean the mating face on the knuckle, and torque everything to Toyota spec using a calibrated torque wrench—especially the axle nut where fitted. Avoid hammering the hub or letting the vehicle’s weight rest on a loose axle, that can bruise the new bearing. It’s also smart to replace single-use fasteners (hub bolts/axle nut) and check the ABS sensor harness routing so it doesn’t rub.
There’s no fixed interval, many last 120,000–200,000 kilometres depending on roads, loads, and how often the wheels see rough potholes or kerb strikes. In Aussie and Kiwi conditions, quick inspections at each service or tyre rotation are spot on—spin and listen, check for heat after a drive, and make sure wheel nuts are torqued correctly. If a bearing starts singing, sort it promptly, it protects tyres, brakes, and the knuckle, and keeps the Crown riding as quietly as it should.
- Tell-tales of a crook bearing: speed-dependent hum, rumble while cornering, ABS light, vagueness under brakes, or free play at 12-and-6 o’clock.
- After replacement: road test, clear ABS codes if stored, and consider an alignment if the knuckle was disturbed.
Popular questions about 2015 Toyota Crown wheel bearings
How long do wheel bearings last on a 2015 Toyota Crown?
There’s no set change interval, but many owners see 120,000–200,000 kilometres before any noise shows up. Harsh roads, deep water, or kerb hits can shorten that. Regular checks at service time will catch issues early.
Can a noisy wheel bearing damage other parts on a 2015 Toyota Crown?
Left too long, a failing bearing can chew out the hub, stress the knuckle, upset ABS readings, and scallop a tyre. Replacing it promptly keeps repair costs down and braking/handling on point.
Do the Crown’s wheel bearings need greasing, or are they sealed?
They’re sealed hub units, so there’s no repacking or adjustment. When worn, the complete hub-and-bearing assembly is replaced, bolted and torqued to spec.