hello, i have an 06 prius with 145,000 miles. i have had 0 problems with the car until recently. On two occasions, when i fueled up, the gauge didn't move from the two bars it was reading prior to fueling. The first time it happened was when my daughter added 3 gallons. The second time i filled it up completely. The gauge seems to stick for a couple of start/drive/ park cycles and then returns to normal. The gauge does go down normally as i drive and it doesn't do this all the time. I have read here about people having trouble getting their tanks to fill, but haven't read anything similar to what i'm experiencing. I took it in to the dealer today and they told me for them to diagnose/fix it could run me hundreds to thousands of dollars. Any thoughts would be appreciated. Bill
I'm not all that familiar with what's actually inside the tank other than the infamous bladder. Of course, the first thing I want to say is that the 'float' or whatever measures the gasoline is stuck. That leads me to my next question: how does the Gen2 Prius actually measure the gasoline? Whatever it is, it's probably stuck on yours.
Sounds pretty normal to me. Three gallons may not bump the gauge ecu enough to register (happened to me a few times). I have also had times when a fill up of more than 1/2 a tank didn't register for quite a while (as you saw, a few start/stop cycles). Do note that the gauge doesn't drop during this time until the actual fuel level drops -below- the indicated level. It's a digital gauge system and is easily confused. Good match to me.
Hoo boy! Here we go again... The infamous and much accursed Fuel and Evap System in all its byzantine complexity and numerous bits. First off, to answer Tony's question: "The direct acting fuel gauge is located in the sub tank. [Emphasis added] This gauge consists of a pipe surrounded by a coil. A float in the pipe moves up and down with changes in the fuel level. A magnet is attached to the float. The up and down movement of the float causes a change in the magnetic field. The flow of current through the coil creates a potential difference and the resultant voltage is transmitted to the meter ECU. The fuel pump module assembly is integral with the fuel tank and is not serviced separately." There is a new to me twist; the fuel gauge --and the fuel pump -- is not in the bladder, it is in a separate "sub tank." The basis reference document for the Fuel and Evap System is: http://www.autoshop101.com/forms/Hybrid13.pdf The above text is from there, and if you look at the various schematic drawings you can see the system represented as such. This arrangement opens the possibility that the tube between the bladder and subtank has become partially blocked somehow and results in a slower than normal equalizing of fluid levels between the bladder and sub tank. There is another possibility, though I will admit it is improbable. Should even some small amount of water get into the bladder, it would collect at the bottom. Through repeated tank fillings the water could work its way into the sub tank. Should the water get between the magnet and coil it might throw off the reading until it fell back to the bottom of the sub tank. There is darn little on PC and even the Inter-web about the internals of the fuel tank. In general it is understood that you can't repair/replace individual components and complete replacement of the whole tank assembly is necessary. I would say that since the guess-gauge is still functional, albeit more slowly than is typical, you might just have to live with it. Sorry.
i think the key factor to consider is that it uses a mechanical float, no digital sensor. IMO this reminds me of twist timers, such as one you find on a kitchen oven timer or I have them in my fitness center for timers on the hot tub jets, sauna and racquetball court. If you want it set for just a few minutes you have to turn them to at least 10 minutes and then turn it back to 5 minutes or whatever. they are unable to recognize a really small twist to the timer handle because they are mechanical, not digital. my $.02
Orangewingnut, Is there any chance that your fuel tank has ever been overfilled enough for fuel to "burp" or pour out of the filler neck? If so, this could lead into a real morass involving one or more charcoal canisters in the fuel and evap system. (Refer to the technical article for discussion of this.) Tony, Here is a post where Galaxee's DH opened up a Gen II fuel tank and took documenting pictures. He not only opened the metal fuel tank but he went on to open the hard plastic sub tank enclosing the fuel pump and sender -- total destruction of both. It is positively stated farther along in the thread that the tank is from a Gen II. The last few of the 25 photos shows the disassembled sender which looks nothing like what I have in mind for the float-in-tube spoken of in the technical article. Maybe there was one of those unannounced mid-cycle changes on this. I don't know. http://priuschat.com/forums/gen-ii-...n/30593-gas-bladder-exposed-2.html#post394632
Ah yes. The Gen 2 "Guess Gauge". We've got a 2009 so we know it well. As others have said inside the tank is a fuel bladder. It's harder/easier to expand and contract in different temps, and for other reasons. There's times you can put 10 gallons in an empty tank, other times only 8. Both times it will eventually read full. Bob64 put up a great visual explaination of this animal at: http://priuschat.com/forums/gen-ii-...uge-dummies-easy-understand-illustration.html Our dealer swears up and down that the bladder is not in the brand spanking new 2012 we just bought. Hope they're right. Good luck. My advice is just refill at 2 blips and at times you need to keep track of your fuel level in your head until your car catches up. ...Mudshark
And yup, we've seen the "put 3 gallons in and it doesn't register, put 3 more in the next day and it jumps up to full" kind of stuff.
Hi Bill. Since one of these occurrences is completely normal (needs more than 3 gal to register), then at this point I'd consider it a one off anomaly. First run a few full tanks through and see if the problem sorts itself out. If you're still having problems then there is a fuel gauge calibration procedure posted some place here that you could try.