I am just about at the end of the line with my prius. I do a lot of freeway driving in FL. Ever since I got the car it has bobbed and weaved on the freeway. I have read this forum cover to cover and tried a number of things. 1. New tires. (195s) 2. BT Plate. 3. Tire pressures. 4. Hold steering loose/ Hold tight. Although it has improved slightly, I feel like I am constantly correcting while driving. I have had the car aligned 7 times to no avail. I am ready to sell it as I feel almost unsafe on the freeway. This is my last alignment spec. FRONT Camber -0.9 -0.9 Caster 3.1 3.1 Toe 0.00 0.02 REAR Camber -1.4 -1.5 Toe 0.09 0.20 Thrust angle -0.05 My steering wheel is also off center about 5 degrees left. From reading this, can anyone diagnose what my car is doing and what I can do to fix it. My other option, which I don't really want to do, is trade it. Perhaps my sanity and safety is worth it. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
how fast do you drive? how many miles on it? did you buy it new? socks/struts? my 08 is perfect on the hywy at 65 mph, 20K miles on it.
Try and drive another Prius, RENT one if you must, and see if you feel the same way. If you still feel it's unstable rent a 2nd one. If you 3/3 are unstable then it's likely that the Prius is out of your "specs". I drive 75 regularly and on an even surface I can lift my hands off of the steering wheel for 4-5 seconds just to test the alignment. It's well within my limits of "tolerable" but it's not perfect. The car feels light on the road but I am used to it. I have 46 psi on my factory tires and they have an extra year (entering their 4th) of life "at least" according to the my mechanic who would make money off of replacing them.
Your front alignment measurement seems fine. The steering wheel position is adjustable, by adjusting the tie rod ends. Was the steering angle sensor zero point calibration performed after the wheel alignment was done? The only potential concern would be with the rear suspension where toe on one side is less than the other. It is still in spec though, as spec is 0.3 degrees total toe, +/- 0.25 degrees. It is possible to adjust this with the use of shims, although a Toyota dealer typically will not do this as the repair manual recommends replacement of rear suspension parts. What tire pressure are you using? Suggest you try 35/33 psi if you currently are using higher tire pressures.
It would have been HELPFUL also if you past in your avatar, what part of Florida you live in. For example, driving into Indio CA has frequent high winds. Same with some of the mountain passes in Montana. That can cause the car to buffet about.
It may be a "feel thing" as suggested, but, I have never had a car that does this. My previous car was a toyota matrix and it was fine. Moving on, what tires would you recommend for Driing in South Florida. I drive the freeway and turnpike every day.
I stuck a front shock upper strut bar on my 06 and it helped out the wandering feeling a great bit, but after I replaced the rear stabilizer bar with a trd (Toyota racing development) the car became very stable. Everyone will give different information about tires but I like the Michelin hydroedge, it evacuates water excellently when needed, true it's an all season and you're in Florida but you do have torrential down pours... when you don't have droughts. You may have a bad tire doing all the mischief, one broken chord in the sidewall will make for a miserable ride.A strong sidewind effects the Prius in a most precarious way and as you know in Florida the wind can be non-stop and with no hills to block it, it just constantly pushes the car around.
I noticed a similar thing when I moved from a VW Jetta TDI. I also drive a Miata MX-5. Both of these cars exhibit very precise steering and excellent handling, so when I bought the Prius I thought, hell, this thing handles like a mini van in a beam wind. But setting the tire pressures to 38 front and 36 rear seemed to help. Also, I find that I'm now adapting to the sloppy (relatively) highway handling of this great little money-saver.
Determining root cause for a difficult problem is most efficiently done if you first put some thought into how to approach the problem. The key is to create a plan whereby at the end of the process, you have moved closer at a minimum to understanding the facts and even better hit that "ah ha!" moment. The three approaches people typically use are: 1. Best guess...try something that seems likely to solve or improve the problem, and hope it works. Some people call this, "throw it against the wall and see what sticks." 2. Ask an expert. 3. Process of elimination. -- For #1 to work, you have to have a reasonably accurate educated guess as to what the problem might be, and it helps if there is only one problem to start with. The advantages of this are that it is relatively inexpensive to do, takes a fairly low amount of expertise on your part to implement, and if you have even a little luck, you might stumble upon the root cause. The downside is that it can take a long time, and it can gradually build up to be quite expensive both in terms of parts/services you have to buy and your own time. In your case, #2 would be to go to a Toyota dealer, ask them to send a tech out with your on a ride, reproduce the problem. The tech should be at least able to tell you if your car is handling normally. This will probably be rather expensive, but presumably the expert will be able to confirm whether you have a true problem and perhaps even be able to tell you what the problem is. Approach #3 is basically a systematic, "divide and conquer" technique. If you start with the right set of things to look for, you will invariably eventually isolate the problem. If you decide to do #3, definitely the next step is the suggestion to rent one or two other Prius's and see if you experience the same handling problem. (One issue with that is that rental car companies may have phased over to the 2010 model year; you will be lucky to find your 2008 model, but you might find a 2009 which probably will suffice). If you can confirm that it is your Prius that is the problem, what I would do as the next step is to get a Toyota tech to drive with you in both yours and the rental car, thereby demonstrating that your car does have a mechanical problem. Beyond that, the next step would be to identify those car components that affect handling and test those one by one (personally, I'm not sufficiently mechanically inclined to be able to do that).
Not sure if this is what you are experiencing but when I first took delivery of my 07 its most irritating thing it did was the constant hunt of the steering. Unlike every other car I have owned you must pay attention to this car's steering. Constant micro correction needed. Can't take your eyes off the road really. Most cars you can just relax and truck on down the road and hold the steering loosely and not pay a whole lot of attention to it and will roll real nice and straight. Not my 07. I was very unhappy. I posted this complaint years ago and many posters just like Patrick here said tire pressure. They were right. At least for the Goodtear Integritys. Which is really one of the world's shitt*est tire. My 07 was delivered with 28 lbs in all the Integrity tires. At 28 lbs it was a constant hunt and peck steering. I pumped it up to 45-43 and the hunt pretty much stopped but the road noise was horrific. I only have 27K on these tires and really don't want to put new tires on till at least 35K miles so to mitigate the road noise I dropped the pressure back down to 32 and bad hunt and peck came right back. Mileage suffered too. So I see you list new tires but I hope to god you didn't buy Integritys again. Please say you didn't???? Because if you did.... all drivability complaints are off the table till you get a set of good tires on the car. Sorry. Try pumping up to 45-42. It will be loud but will roll mostly straight and get good mileage.Still tiny hunting but better. I have really good hearing so Noises drive me crazy so I opted for the least amount of annoyance. I'm so used to its driving. Unlike my Crown Vic which will roll in a straight line for miles and miles. Good Luck!!
That is exactly it. A constant hunt of the steering...micro manage steering wheel...and don't take eyes off road. I did replace the stock tires with bigger one...as suggested. 195 yokohamas. It made it better, but this car just does not drive like a car of todays time should. All I want is to be able to not get bumped around at 70mph on the turnpike and be able to not contantly be "on the steering wheel" waiting for that correction to happen. Oh well, I guess I have to live with it, until the next car, which at this point is unlikely to be another prius. I have had a lot of toyotas, but this one is making me have my doubts.
I want to second the comment about driving another Prius or two. The steering on the Prius does have a different feel (or lack of feel) from most cars. There is little dead band and tiny hand movements are transfered to the wheels. It took me a while to get used to it. As pointed out above, your Prius may have a problem, or it could be nothing more than you not liking the feel of the car. Until you test drive another Prius you won't be able to say which it is. Tom
take a gen III for a test drive and let us know what you think. it would be an interesting comparison. i have to think something is wrong with your car, this is not a big complaint around here.
Really, I would beg to differ. Do a search for tires, wandering, drifting, etc. etc.....and all the threads about how people have tried to improve the handling of the car.
I can compare our Prius to our Subaru. The Prius without a doubt has a touchy steering wheel. My adjustment to it came when I learned not to over-correct. Nowadays I don't really prefer the Prius handling on the highway, but it's fine. Well, except on windy days; then I have to fight a bit.
I use 44/42 PSI tires. After a month I got used to the squirrelly steering and ever since it feels normal.
Your problem has all the signs of an out-of-spec rear alignment. I would take it to the Toyota dealer (if you know a good one) and have them do the alignment. The rear alignment is not adjustable in the usual sense on the Prius, but don't let them try to sell you a new axle beam - they can shim the rear hubs into alignment. And experiment with tire pressures.