The first piece of advice here is to not drive the car at all until this problem is fixed. A car with faulty brakes is one of the most dangerous situations you can find yourself in, and it’s just not safe to even attempt to move it, even to relocate it on the driveway. The problem could get a lot worse very quickly, leaving you with no brakes at all. And even if it doesn’t get any worse, your limited braking capacity could make an emergency situation much, much worse.
The noise is probably not brake-line pressure escaping, since you don’t have falling brake fluid levels. At which point, my suspicion becomes that the brake master cylinder is at fault. This is a device that uses vacuum from the engine to assist you to push the brake pedal. If the diaphragm inside the booster fails, you will might hear the vacuum escaping, with a hissing noise. Even if the booster is intact internally, a simple hose that connects the booster to the engine could have split and caused the leak. Until it’s fixed, though, you won’t have full braking power and that’s, obviously, very dangerous.
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That’s getting up there for any car, even though modern engines are capable of much greater distances than their older relatives. But that sort of mileage does raise some questions.
Those start with how complete is the service history. If there are any gaps, this would be a car to avoid, as any vehicle with that sort of distance covered will only be as good as its servicing and maintenance allow. The other question is what sort of life the car has led. Three hundred thousand kilometres sounds like a lot, but if you break it down to kilometres per year, it works out at less than 18,000km per annum, which is well within the bounds of normality.
However, the bottom line is this with all high-mileage vehicles: You might get lucky and get another 150,000 trouble-free kilometres out of the thing, or it might go bang tomorrow. That’s the punt you take and that’s why high-milers are cheap to buy. Which is another way of saying that even with a full service record, a RAV4 with that sort of mileage would still need to be cheap.
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Without a doubt, the best thing to do now is the have the car electronically scanned. That’s because there are literally hundreds of things that could cause this sort of problem, ranging from (but hardly limited to) a sick fuel pump, a blocked fuel filter, worn injectors, a fuel leak, poor ignition, a low-voltage battery, dirty air-filter, blocked or damaged exhaust, a stray electrical problem and much, much more. Even something simple like a fuel rail that is not holding pressure when the engine is switched off, can lead to symptoms very much like yours.
Hopefully, the on-board computer has logged these random starting problems and will be able to tell a mechanic what’s wrong. Otherwise you’ll simply continue replacing parts that weren’t the problem in the first place. And that costs time and lots of money.
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The Toyota RAV4 line-up starts with the GX, which is available in Glacier White, Eclipse Black, Frosted White, Atomic Rush (red), Saturn Blue, Massive Grey, Urban Rock, Dusty Bronze or Daintree Green. The same palette is applied to the GXL. The Edge slims your choices, with only Glacier White, Eclipse Black, Massive Grey, Urban Rock and Daintree Green available.
Step up to the XSE and you can have Dusty Bronze with Ebony Roof, Frosted White with Ebony Roof, Massive Grey with Ebony Roof or Blue with Ebony Roof, while the Cruiser trim broadens your choices again to Glacier White, Eclipse Black, Frosted White, Atomic Rush (red), Saturn Blue, Massive Grey, Urban Rock, Dusty Bronze or Daintree Green.
The GR Sport trim is offered in Eclipse Black, Frosted White, Massive Grey, Urban Rock or the hero Feverish Red.
The 2027 Toyota RAV4 line-up, whether plug-in or conventional hybrid, share the cabin updates recently made across the entire range, which means better tech and materials. There are also, mercifully, enough regular buttons to keep you from digging through the central screen for core functions.
The new Toyota RAV4 line-up steps from the GX, GXL and Edge (all with a hybrid powertrain), while the XSE is offered with a choice of conventional hybrid or a plug. Next is the hybrid-only Cruiser, followed by the flagship GR Sport, which is PHEV AWD only.
The GX gets things like fabric seats with manual adjustment, 17-inch alloys and a smaller 10.5-inch central screen. The GXL adds 18-inch alloys and a powered driver's seat. Step up to the Edge and you get a better 12.9-inch touchscreen, wireless charging and synthetic leather-accented seat trim.
The XSE builds on that with 20-inch alloys, an auto-opening boot, a tilt-and-slide sunroof, and a second 12.3-inch digital driver display, while the flagship GR Sport gets a unique exterior package, including a new grille, bumpers and a rear spoiler. Inside, there are sport front seats and the GR Sport also adds dual wireless phone chargers, a head-up display and a branded JBL stereo.
The 2027 Toyota RAV4 Hybrid and PHEV are five-seat SUVs with a family focus, and because of the way the roof lining kinks upwards just when it gets to the rear passengers' heads, there is ample space in the second row for adults. ISOFIX attachment points appear in each window seat in the back, and our 175cm tester had no problem getting comfy in the second row.
The Toyota RAV4 PHEV's boot is slightly smaller than its non-plugged sibling, now at 655L VDA rather than the regular hybrid’s 705 litres. Kudos to Toyota, though, for fitting a space-saving spare.
The hybrid versions of the Toyota RAV4 all share the same powertrain – a 2.5-litre four-cylinder petrol engine paired with electric propulsion in either two- or all-wheel drive. The plug-in power in the RAV4 PHEV comes from the combination of a 2.5-litre petrol engine, a 22.7kWh battery, a front electric motor in 2WD spec, and a second rear electric motor in the AWD trims.
The conventional hybrid system in the new Toyota RAV4 will deliver a claimed 4.5L/100km on the combined cycle, which feels like a believable number. Add to that a 55-litre fuel tank and a total driving range of around 1200kms should be achievable. Like most makers of plug-in hybrids, Toyota's claim of 0.7L/100km on the combined cycle for the RAV4 PHEV are fanciful, you will never get close to that. We were averaging around 3.0L with the battery topped up, which is good. But if you want to use no fuel, Toyota says the 2WD version will travel 121kms on electric power alone, while the AWDs will take you 113kms.
At 227kW for the AWD model, the plug-in hybrid is the most potent Toyota RAV4 ever. The GR Sport, for example, will hit 100km/h in just 5.8secs. Interestingly, it is the only model in the RAV4 family in which a zero-to-100km/h time is listed.