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2017 Prius Windshield and Door panel Moisture (EDITED)

Discussion in 'Gen 4 Prius Technical Discussion' started by dslomer64, Feb 27, 2018.

  1. dslomer64

    dslomer64 Member

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    About a month ago, I began noticing a little light interior condensation at the middle bottom of my 2017 Prius windshield before heading out for the day.

    Yesterday, after lots of rain previous day, I noticed droplets of condensation on the driver's side interior plastic door panel near the front edge (by my knee, seated).

    Last night, after letting the car set 8 hours in bright sunlight (60°F.) and then the chilly evening (50), there was so much condensation on the interior windshield surface that it took several minutes for blower to totally clear it.

    I don't see any other evidence of water except door panel and windshield. Hatch window was foggy.

    (Locking door SCREECH solved. Geez.)

    On the way home, the auto headlight dimmer was erratic. First time ever.

    I wish I noticed if lane change warning was working, but the fact that I don't know suggests it might not have been. Today it works.

    Was the camera fogged over and stayed that way all the way home? Makes sense. Tonight if headlights dim appropriately as always, fine.

    Could enough condensation have built up inside the apparatus that controls auto headlights, front radar, etc. to render it partly inoperable temporarily?

    BUT how did so much water get onto the windshield with nobody inside?

    Dave Slomer
     
    #1 dslomer64, Feb 27, 2018
    Last edited: Feb 27, 2018
  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    classic prius problem, are you using heat or a/c to try and dry it out?
     
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  3. dslomer64

    dslomer64 Member

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    I don't see any evidence of moisture today. Used heater blower last night before driving home to clear windshield.

    So are you suggesting that I should assume there's plenty of water somewhere? What should I do? Heat or a/c? I'll go check right now.

    And what does classic Prius problem mean? That I should do a search for "leaking windshield"?

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  4. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    a/c is drier. water in a '17 would be unheard of, i think. in the past, if it isn't under the carpets, it's in the spare tire area.
     
  5. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    When you demist, make sure the A/C is on? Someone was complaining about moisture building up a year or so ago on PriusChat, but it seems they were turning the A/C off when demisting.
     
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  6. dslomer64

    dslomer64 Member

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    Well... Absolutely dry as a bone.

    Carpet in 4 seated areas and hatch, no water in areas underneath 2 mats and cheesy cover in hatch area and "basement" beneath, down to metal.

    Checked "firewall carpet": dry.

    Checked engine area as badly as I could.

    Seats dry. Ceiling dry. Top of dashboard dry including window seams, though they've had time to dry.

    Dry, dry, dry. But this might not be good news, I'm betting.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    just for kicks, check your 12v health, aside from the moisture problem, to make sure it isn't causing any of the other symptoms.
     
  8. kithmo

    kithmo Couch Potato

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    Replace the pollen/cabin filter they tend to absorb more moisture when they get dirty.
     
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  9. dslomer64

    dslomer64 Member

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    I will replace the cabin air filter. But I wonder if the problem could be simply that, in cold weather, with heat on, I shut out fresh air, which is cold. I only open that vent when the windshield starts to fog. I had the same habit in my '06 but never this quantity of moisture. Only occasionally has there been a passenger in either car but I suppose that's irrelevant. I rarely open the windows in winter and don't leave the doors open any longer than it takes to get out and take what I need with me.

    So this accumulated moisture in the air theory has my attention.

    One of the first trips we took in my '79 CoroNa WAGON had five people inside in winter. Every window fogged. I didn't know why. Called dealer. Embarrassed by the "fix". (Let in fresh air.)

    Anyway since I can't find any water anywhere, I'll drive it around 45 miles on interstate soon, heat on (which automatically turns on A/C, which I usually turn off and shan't agayn. Still Dumb After All These Years).

    Might this be the solution?

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  10. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    good thought, i would try more fresh dry air, even if it is colder.
     
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  11. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    Definitely the A/C OFF will be your problem. The demisting action of the A/C is much better than just heat. Heat creates steam. Which then re-cycles around the car.

    With A/C on, the moisture will condense on the evaporator, and when the drips build up on the evaporator, it drips and exits through the drip tube onto the road. Have a look at a home air-conditioner - this is just a small bedroom one, it's 60% humidity, and this is how much moisture dripped into the dog's plate in 75 seconds. It will fill it within the hour many days (no I don't leave her to drink from it, but just to soak it before cleaning - though I've caught them both drinking from it, as it's 3 less steps than to their water bowls!!).

    upload_2018-3-1_13-1-3.png
     
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  12. kithmo

    kithmo Couch Potato

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    AC definitely clears condensation fast but I think the main problem is not allowing fresh air in, it's just recycling whatever moisture is in the car back around again.
    I find messing about with the AC (on and off) causes more misting than leaving it on or off entirely.
    I know this defies logic, but I find leaving AC switched off I don't get as much condensation as leaving it on when the climate is in AUTO and switching it on and off as required.
    I haven't tried leaving AC on and using the climate in manual mode, but I suspect that will work equally as well.
     
    #12 kithmo, Mar 1, 2018
    Last edited: Mar 1, 2018
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  13. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    It depends on the moisture content of the outside air. If you can use the A/C on Recirc, it takes the inside air past the A/C evaporator time and time again, each time taking more moisture out. If you let outside moist air in, you never win.

    But, if your outside air has low moisture content, then you might find advantage with FRESH rather than RECIRC.

    It's mid-summer here (was 34C today), so I can't test it, but I thought that if you pressed the DEMIST button, it closed the RECIRC and put A/C on - whatever it defaults to, seems to work OK.

    We lived on the Atherton Tablelands for 10 years - initially with cars with no A/C, they would actually get musty smelling inside. We had to wash mould from our entire house at least once a year - twice if we had energy - initially with brooms, bleach and hard work - later with a high-pressure washer:
    upload_2018-3-1_21-23-23.png

    Driving at night was always risky because we didn't know if there would be heavy fog when it came time to go home.

    But when I got my first A/C car in '76, I tried just about every combination - but VOLVO had it worked out in their handbook. It said to close outside vents and use A/C in conjunction with the heater to achieve a comfortable temperature - I guess it got a bit colder in VOLVO country than Atherton.

    Some Pics (from GOOGLE) of Atherton Tablelands, in Far North Queensland:
    upload_2018-3-1_21-36-10.png
     
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  14. RCO

    RCO Senior Member

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    I'm pretty confident you are experiencing condensation from respiration etc. Using the HVAC, or air-conditioner will remove that moisture to the outside of the car.

    Not sure that will be true for climate outside of tropical rain forests and humidity is a constant 100%, but in more temperate climates the fresh outside air will be dehumidified by the chiller before entering the cabin. YMMV.
     
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  15. mark27lim

    mark27lim Active Member

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    try this: keep recirc and a/c both always on. irregardless whether you heat or cool. and windows always closed. this setup will continuously make your cabin drier and drier. if this doesn’t work it means either the a/c isn’t working or you have a moisture source that is introducing it faster than the a/c can take it out. oh and if you see windshield fogging, check by using the wiper whether it’s on the outside or inside. good luck!
     
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  16. pilotgrrl

    pilotgrrl Senior Member

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    Sometimes a little water gets inside my 2016 door sill after it rains, and there's condensation on both front and rear windshields if the temperature dropped a lot after it rained.

    Maybe that's what's happening.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  17. dslomer64

    dslomer64 Member

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    I forgot about the condensation on the door panel, Pilotgirl. Thanks for the reminder. I was almost ready to reply to my original and say everything is working fine, which it is, but the door panel needs attention.

    Could it be as simple as a plugged drain hole? I guess I'll take it to Toyota and let them figure it out, though I'm not confident they'll try very hard since under warranty.

    Pilotgirl, how do you know water gets inside your door and what have you tried to prevent it? We don't need no steenkeeng rust inside our doors that we only find when outside starts bubbling.

    I had a blocked drainage channel (maple seeds) in my '06 hatch that directed water into my 12V battery compartment, which I only found when battery died (of natural causes, I assume--not submerged; right age). Drilled hole in bottom; problem solved. Rather not solve this problem that way.

    I guess the question, "How do I know water is getting inside the door?" is answered by pointing at condensation on inside of door next time it happens and saying, "Look!"

    Anyway, plenty of rain recently; no recurrence. All seems okay. Except door.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  18. pilotgrrl

    pilotgrrl Senior Member

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    The Gen 4 doesn't have the little channels on the roof like my Gen 2 did. So a little rain rolls/falls off the roof and down the inside of the window sill onto the internal door sill on the driver's side front.

    Drilling a hole would definitely not resolve this issue. Perhaps a very fine bead of clear silicone caulk at the upper edge of the window sill might. What do you think?

    It doesn't appear that water is getting inside the door itself. All the condensation is on the windshields. The defroster and defogger take care of it.



    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  19. RCO

    RCO Senior Member

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    I find that with the slightest breeze blowing while it's raining (yup, it did happen in England :whistle:) open any for in the Prius and rain gets inside. There's no roof gutter so it just falls onto the seats.
     
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  20. pilotgrrl

    pilotgrrl Senior Member

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    Thanks @RCO, roof gutter is the term I needed.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
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