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NO fix for Prius Gas Tank Filling Up Issues

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by dar, Jun 16, 2008.

  1. FreddieVee

    FreddieVee Junior Member

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    There are lots of old sayings:

    "To understand a man, you've got to walk a mile in his shoes, whether they fit or not."

    "Judge not lest ye be judged."

    Before you insinuate that I am a horse or a pig, there is one more:

    "An elephant never forgets."

    I may be a lot weightier than either a horse or pig.

    Maybe you think that the Prius manual is inspired text. But maybe because you have never walked a mile in my shoes, you have never seen that manuals many times are made for legal denial and many laws and warnings are there with little reasoning. I have worked on some of the most sophisticated machinery in the world and I can tell you that many published caveats are only there to satisfy governmental agencies and/or to satisfy the company's legal department's paranoia and many warnings are there for the same reason.

    Many gas pumps say that it is illegal to smoke while refueling. They also say "Turn off engine before fueling". Many say "Cell Phone Usage Prohibited". I have seen police vehicles refueling while the police officer talks with dispatch using either a hand held walkie-talkie or the vehicle's on-board radio. Both have power outputs many times that of a cell-phone and no gasoline pump fire has ever been caused by cell phone usage. So which of the warnings should I follow? Smoking while fueling is illegal? OK. Plainly stated (and many stations even quote the legal statute paragraph number). Turn off engine before fueling? Does that really pertain to a Prius? Since the gas engine is not running and therefor there is neither exhaust fumes nor a constantly heated catalytic converter to cause a fire, I would venture to say that the Prius might be exempt from the reasoning for the "Turn Off Engine" warning posted on the pumps. Technically the engine is off. No cell phone usage? Why? The pump postings do not say that refueling while the engine on is illegal, nor does it say that cell-phone usage is illegal. And even if it did say fueling while the engine is running is illegal, would a Prius be in violation?

    I saw a South Park episode called "Smug Alert" about three years ago and while it was a satirical harpooning of the smugness of some Prius owners, I did not expect to find it here at this forum. Call me naive, but I assumed that "Green People" had more empathy and compassion.

    I was an aircraft mechanic for 35 years and I know of many plane crashes (thank God nothing I was involved with) in which the pilot or mechanic who was most directly responsible for the crash had done everything by "The Book". After the NTSB finished the investigation, "The Book" was revised. Many times in my last five years before retirement, pilots who had a problem just after take-off or just prior to approach would call our maintenance office's VHF radio and ask advice. Some asked for me by name, some by my title. Whenever I gave advice, I always preceded any instructions with, "Before following any of my instructions, make sure it does not violate anything in your pilot's flight handbook". Sometimes they would say that it didn't, so they would follow my instructions and sometimes they would say it would be a violation, but occasionally, after they landed, they would tell me that they had to say that they could not follow my instructions, but they did follow my instructions anyway. Did I know more than pilots? Of course I did when it came to how the plane worked. And the more modern the plane, the less the pilots know about it. There was a plane crash in which the computer overrode the pilot and flew the plane right into the trees.

    The FAA even instituted a program in which the pilots no longer write-up their problems in the log book as they see it. Instead they have to get out a manual, follow some diagrammed steps and then call in a code. And then the mechanic on the ground is supposed to look up that code and follow the diagrams to determine how to fix the problem and he must carry the photocopy of the repair/checkout procedure while working on the plane and sign off the log book with fixed as per Maintenance Manual 34-24-18 page 601-623. And then the photocopied paperwork must be thrown away, in case the next time you have that problem, an update to the manual had occurred. That would mean that a mechanic with 6 months experience is as good as one with 30 years. Do you think that is true?

    Yes, I made a mistake. I didn't read the part of the Prius manual about refueling. Does that give fellow forum members the right to say:

    plus the horse and pig references?

    How about acting civilly?
     
  2. ETP

    ETP 2021 Prime(Limit),24 Venza Limit,B52-D,G,F,H

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    I have a 2009 touring also and as of yet have not had the refueling problems that others have had. Keep us posted on what you get with the car off. Interesting thread to say the least.
     
  3. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    You can't guarantee that the Prius ICE will not start when the car is in Ready mode. It will start whenever it sees fit. A low SOC or low temperature will cause it to start uncommanded. As for the risk of fire or explosion, it is very small with any modern automobile. The laws exist because there is a finite increase in risk and it is very easy to turn off a car. The small inconvenience of stopping and starting an engine is easily outweighed by even a small risk of catastrophe. A bigger risk is entering and exiting a vehicle while refueling. That should be illegal as well.

    It doesn't bother me that you didn't read your manual. That's your prerogative. It also doesn't bother me if you wish to put your life at risk. I do it all the time rock climbing and sailing offshore. People should be allowed to set their own level of risk. What I don't like is when someone chooses to risk the lives of others without their consent. Choosing to hot refuel falls into this category. If you refuel on your own property away from others, you can do it however you see fit. When you refuel in public you should respect the lives and property of others and the law of the land.

    As for pig comments, I didn't mean any offense. Pigs are delightful and kind animals, and I wouldn't besmirch them in any way.

    Tom
     
  4. john_dough

    john_dough New Member

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    FREDDIE VEE--as you have now noticed, this forum can be a mostly helpful place to visit. It does, however, have a couple of "Behavior Nazis" and "Prius Defenders". You have encountered one of the best and most prolific.
     
  5. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Around 15 years ago, I had fractional ownership of a club 172. We thought it was really cute how after the mandated major inspection, none of the instument lights worked, and when checking the controls, pulling back on the yoke it jammed

    You must be referring to that demonstrator flight of Air France's first Airbus A320. The pilot wanted to do a low, slow flyby to impress the crowd.

    High bypass ratio turbofans are dangerous to operate in such a mode, they take a very long time to spool up if you need TOGA power. The software will work as follows if you attempt to manually configure an Airbus to fly into a situation the radar altimeter and/or EGPWS considers too low/slow for the aircraft:

    1. Flaps in, gear up: Depending on vertical speed, speed and altitude: "CONFIG" in display, master warning wailer, TOGA thrust applied, Alpha Floor protection applied. Or, "STALL" in display, the previous, plus "STALL! STALL! STALL!" aural warnings

    2. Flaps2, gear up: Almost the same warnings, but TOGA and Alpha Floor applied a bit later. Depends on altitude, vertical speed, and aircraft speed

    3. Flaps3, gear up: Ditto

    4. Flaps full, gear up: Additional wailer and aural "too low terrain pull up" warning

    So what that pilot did was dump the primary flight computer. Easy enough to do, reach up and switch it off. Contrary to popular belief, you CAN fly an Airbus fly-by-wire in Direct Law

    By putting the aircraft into Direct Law, automatic TOGA and Alpha Floor protection are disabled. Since a large, efficient, modern airliner is difficult to slow down, once you reach the stall boundary, some very bad things can happen

    Once the aircraft struggled at the edge of the stall boundary, it settled into a graceful stall. Slamming the throttles forward on an Airbus commands TOGA thrust, as the FADEC operates separately from the control computer.

    However, a large high bypass turbofan takes a long time to spool up. If you only have 5 or so seconds to avert disaster, you're screwed

    Naturally, there are all sort of interesting conspiracy theories about that flight. The pilot was charged with manslaughter, and given how socialist and coddling most EU countries are, it's rare to see such a conviction

    On the topic of that dreaded computer "over riding" the pilot and causing a crash. The Air Inter Airbus that crashed in France. In preparation for landing, the flight crew had incorrectly selected v/s instead of fpa, so instead of selecting what they thought was -3.3 degrees nose down - a common approach for an airliner - they had selected 3,300 feet per second descent. They crashed into a mountainous region

    I've been involved in a few Human Factors Engineering studies. There are rare examples of outright failure, but common causes of pilot error
     
  6. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Doh! :doh:
     
  7. FreddieVee

    FreddieVee Junior Member

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    That airbus was supposed to be impossible to crash.

    But I am sure either of us could Google until we find something to make us feel superior. But that is my point. Book learning is wonderful, but it needs to be tempered by "hands on" experience.

    Anyone can read a Prius handbook, I didn't and I admit my mistake. But some people need to feel superior so they belittle others. I will call no one on this forum (or any other forum) a horse, pig, "Behavior Nazis" or "Prius Defenders" or even megalomaniacs. We are all human and subject to human failings. What annoys me the most is that after the first sarcastic response to my earnest question, I took the trouble to approach the respondent with a private message. I wrote:
    **************************
    Thank you for your response to my question about my refueling problem.

    Regarding your comment about fueling while power is on, I must admit that I missed that section of the Prius manual, but as far as being illegal, you may be correct technically, but since the gas engine is not running and therefor there is neither exhaust fumes nor a constantly heated catalytic converter to cause a fire, I would venture to say that they Prius might be exempt from the reasoning for the Shut Engine posted on the pumps. Technically the engine is off.

    My wife suffers from medical conditions which is beyond the scope of this letter, so in Florida's heat, turning the AC off is a problem and opening the windows causes her to gag on the fumes. When I am alone, I turn off all power and I will try to schedule refueling in the future for when I can be alone.

    My point is there was no need for your "Now might be a good time to mend your ways" comment. It sounded (to me) like preaching and sanctimonious. Maybe I am wrong. I hope so.

    Again, thank you for your information.

    FreddieVee
    *****************************

    The private message reply was, "Put this post in the forum. That way others can benefit from the discussion" and I answered that "I don't think that my personal situation is of any benefit to the other members."

    So the next full forum response from that member was: "Never try to teach a pig to sing. It only wastes your time and annoys the pig." and after I asked for more civility: "As for pig comments, I didn't mean any offense. Pigs are delightful and kind animals, and I wouldn't besmirch them in any way."

    Very cute.

    Did someone miss? "I will try to schedule refueling in the future for when I can be alone." Isn't an admission of a mistake and a pledge to do better in the future enough?

    I guess at every forum there is someone and usually a clique of supporters that has to make life miserable for other members. And very often, the people who make life miserable are knowledgeable, so others will sell their souls for advice. That is why I never join forum groups or accept friendship invitations.

    As far as me putting other people's lives in danger, the engine has never started once during the 5 or 6 times that I have refueled as low temperature is not a problem here in Florida and I always have plenty of blue bars showing on my battery prior to refueling. And as I said before that comment was posted, I will try to do better in the future. But I wonder if you are as quick to criticize Prius owners who try for maximum fuel economy. Constantly watching the instant MPG readings on the display panel has been shown to increase mileage, but constantly looking at the instant MPG readings on the display panel can be a distraction which I would bet dollars to doughnuts has a higher probability of putting (other) people's lives at risk than refueling a Prius with power on. And does every body who worries about hot refueling stop on red before making a right turn and stop fully at every stop sign? Please don't answer yes. I have been driving for 46 years.

    Going back to airplanes for one moment. We could lower the number of deaths from fire after an impact survivable plane crash by putting sprinklers on all the planes. There was an estimate that it would cut the death rate per crash by 75%. The reason would be that the extra weight of the sprinklers and water would lower the available passenger weight capacity by so much that the price per ticket would need to quadruple and the amount of people per plane would drop. Very little of the life saving would be because of the water sprinklers. Most of the savings of life would be because it would become too expensive to fly.
     
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  8. ETP

    ETP 2021 Prime(Limit),24 Venza Limit,B52-D,G,F,H

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    This happened to me this morning! I hit the start button and it would not go into reverse. I turned the system off and back on and everything was normal.
     
  9. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    The Airbus fly-by-wire series was designed to be safer, but nothing on this planet is "impossible" to crash. I've done enough Human Factors engineering to know one cannot attach "impossible" to anything

    There is a reason why first Airbus, then Boeing (The 777 series) went fly-by-wire: weight savings, redundancy, increased efficiency, etc. On large airliners, there is no direct connection between the yoke and the flight control surface, everything is servo assist

    So whether a fly-by-wire control system fails after a major incident, or the hydraulic system loses all fluid, the end result is usually the same.

    You may recall the crash of a United DC-10 at Sioux City, IA, as the result of the center engine having a catastrophic failure. The entire front hub departed the aircraft, and was eventually found in a farmers field

    The DC-10 has 3 separate hydraulic systems, but all 3 were routed in close proximity to the center engine. When the front hub failed, the violent separation tore through all 3 hydraulic lines. The only way to control the DC-10 was by modulating thrust on the two remaining engines. The crash was inevitable



    A lot of folks automatically assume the computer is to blame. Such as the Canadian charter airline Air Transat Airbus A330 emergency landing at a military field in the Azores, after running out of fuel and gliding about 20 minutes over the Atlantic

    The pilot and co-pilot refused to believe the computer telling them there was a fuel imbalance, they even opened the crossfeed manually to balance the levels.

    What actually happened, the mechanics replaced one of the the engines before the flight. A fuel pipe was improperly routed, the normal vibration during flight chaffed a hole in the pipe, and fuel gushed out

    Once both engines shut down due to fuel exhaustion, the APU couldn't be started, as there wasn't any useable fuel on board. In that situation, the ram air turbine deploys to provide just enough electrical and hydraulic power to keep critical systems up.

    On landing, all the tires were destroyed due to having no spoilers and no anti-skid. All survived

    An earlier example is the Air Canada Boeing 767 that ran out of fuel over Red Lake, Ontario, and managed to glide to Gimli, Manitoba. Improper maintenance and procedures allowed the Boeing to depart with no working fuel gauges

    Comical errors were made in fuel load conversion factors. However, the plane was able to successfully land

    As a practising engineer, sometimes I've had to do forensic investigation of incidents and outright failures. A disturbing number of such failures are traced back to improper/sloppy procedures, especially those involving repair
     
  10. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Remember the DC-10 that crashed on takeoff in Chicago? That one lost an engine. The problem was traced back to a bad maintenance procedure where AA removed and installed engines using a fork truck. Their procedure stressed the mounting flanges and induced cracking. One of them finally failed. Human factors once again.

    Tom
     
  11. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    As for this tempest in a teapot we have going, let me say once again that I don't think hot refueling is a hanging offense. The law most likely dates back to the days of carbureted engines without good air filters, where the chance of ignition was much higher. It's probably not much of a risk today. It is, however, illegal in most jurisdictions. Perhaps this is another outdated law that should be purged or amended. We have a lot of laws like that. Anyone need a project?

    In the case of private messages, I like to keep thread related comments in the thread where they can be read by others. Obviously I didn't post your private comments since you expressed an interest in keeping your situation private, although you have since changed your mind.

    The pig comment is a metaphor, but apparently it was wasted. We have had many similar threads, and they are invariably a waste of time. You aren't likely to amend a person's fundamental behavior with a few comments on a public forum, hence to similarity to trying to teach a pig to sing. I tend to leave them alone except when a poster is particularly recalcitrant.

    Tom
     
  12. bedrock8x

    bedrock8x Senior Member

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    There is always a risk when refueling with the engine on with a hot catalytic converter.
    The Prius is no exception as it been pointed out in previous posts that the ICE will start any time.

    I personally have driven for more than 40 years and have refueled thousand of times, but it is always a risk for gas spilling. It happened to me two years ago when the nozzle would not shut off. I was cleaning the windshield on the passenger side and didn't see the spill.
    By the time I walked around it had spilled more than couple of gallons on the ground and a large puddle under the car. If I had the engine running it would have burst into flames.
    I was so scared that immediate shut off the nozzle and then pushed the car forward from the puddle without starting the car. I then told the attendant about the faulty nozzle but he gave me a shrug and didn't say a thing. It appeared to me that they knew the problem.

    It is statistically very small chance that a gas nozzle will malfunction causing a spill,
    but by Murphy's law it could happen to anyone.
     
  13. Worknclassbug

    Worknclassbug New Member

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    Hey guys. I've been just looking through this thread. I'm having the same problem out of my '08 as some others. When it gets to empty (last flashing pip) it will only take about 6 gallons before the pump shuts off and the fuel gauge shows full. It didn't always do this but does it every time now at any gas station. I'm hesitant to take it in to the dealer but I'm approaching 30 thousand miles and getting close to the end of the warranty. Should I just accept this as a flaw and deal with it?
     
  14. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    If this behavior is indeed new, it could be that the inclinometer calibration is off. The dealer can run a simple procedure to reset it on a level surface. Alternately, you can do it yourself. Instructions can be found on this site.

    Tom
     
  15. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Yep. Everybody in a big fire rush to service parts quickly, do shortcuts, and folks had to die as a result. Is anybody ever held to account? Or does some union step in and threaten a walkout?

    The DC-10 suffered from a series of problems, not all of them due to the airplane itself. However, combined those problems were enough to stop production of the aircraft

    Consider the Swissiar MD-11 (A newer derivative of the DC10) that crashed off Peggy's Cove, it had nothing to do with the actual aircraft systems

    Swissair111.org The Crash of Swissair 111

    but revealed a much larger fleet-wide problem with Kapton wire insulation and wire bundle shorts/fires. You would have to ground in excess of 50% of the current fleet to get away from that problem

    The earliest DC-10 series had problems with the cargo door. One blew open in flight over Ontario, that plane landed safely. Another cargo door blew open over France, all perished

    The DC-10 cargo door was a fairly new design, it opened out instead of up/in. It could be serviced improperly, and latched improperly on the ground, to blow off in flight. A similar cargo door design is used on the 747, and almost all new airliners

    Of course, that United 747 also lost a cargo door shortly after takeoff from Honolulu. The explosive decompression resulted in 9 passengers being ejected, and the force of the decompression also destroyed the emergency oxygen system

    The debris from the explosive decompression caused severe damage to #3 engine, and damage to #4 engine. Human remains were found shredded in #3 engine, which I suppose was a quicker death than plummeting 23,000 ft in freefall to smack on the ocean below

    The DC-10 that had the fan hub fracture, causing an uncontained explosive event in the motor, also didn't have anything unique to that plane

    http://www.airdisaster.com/reports/ntsb/AAR90-06.pdf

    Other airliners have had uncontained fan/rotor hub failures.

    http://www.ntsb.gov/publictn/1998/AAR9801.pdf

    The MD88 that suffered this failure, the blades penetrated the fuselage and killed a couple of passengers. It was probably instantaneous for the passengers. That airplane never left the runway, they did the RTO procedure and stopped safely

    There is a sad history of improper/lazy maintenance and procedure that has resulted in injury and death. It's like playing Roulette, eventually the stars align and the stats catch up to you

    Consider the Embraer turboprop that threw a blade, causing severe damage to the airframe and nacelle

    http://www.airdisaster.com/reports/ntsb/AAR92-03.pdf

    Say what you want about foreign aircraft, Hamilton Standard screwed the pooch. Badly

    What I found most disturbing when I participated in forensic engineering analysis, is that these failure modes were entirely predictible, and entirely preventable
     
  16. ETP

    ETP 2021 Prime(Limit),24 Venza Limit,B52-D,G,F,H

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    Same thing happened to me! I was leaning against the car and it soaked my pants and filled my new shoe with gas.
     
  17. ron davison

    ron davison New Member

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    I have a 2008 and if I top it off I have to watch out for blow back, If I don't top it off I get a lot less miles per tank.
     
  18. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    If I were you, forget the cruising range, I wouldn't top off or at least not so much that you might get gas spewing back out. I'd let it auto-stop or maybe 1 extra click at most.

    See http://priuschat.com/forums/gen-ii-prius-technical-discussion/30593-gas-bladder-exposed.html for more details. The cost to replace the tank is at http://priuschat.com/forums/gen-ii-...ion/30593-gas-bladder-exposed.html#post394667.
     
  19. priushippie

    priushippie New Member

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    Filling the tank is a waste of gas because you lower your MPG by at least 2. Never fill up beyond half of a tank.
     
  20. boppo

    boppo Active Member

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    show me some facts to back that up.