I think I'd remove the EV/HV button and test it. Sounds like it's just a bad button. From your last post, it seems to press itself and refuse to recognize presses at other times and not in any consistent pattern.
That's why I bought a Prime; come on folks, it's only money, har, har!! The Prime can be driven up to 84 mph while it usually will remain in the default EV mode, a VAST improvement over my 2012 PIP. Also, I average 32 or so miles of range vs. 9 miles with my PIP here in Socal. Of course, right now I'm a Monster ICE polluter driving that Sentra Turd Rental while my baby gets repaired at the body shop. Posted via the PriusChat mobile app. AChoiredTaste.com
I have to salute your courage in purchasing such a technologically complicated (and USED!) JDM version PIP Prius in Pakistan. Our best cars in Algeria were very early (simpler) Citroens and Jeeps! And I'm SURE you must have 5 or 6 excellent Toyota dealers in your city, har, har. It would be really interesting to see how many Prii are in your area; a car club is pretty helpful in getting assistance with "interesting" cars like Prii. Our Alfa Club sure helped me out when I owned those cars. Good luck! Can you contact previous owner? Posted via the PriusChat mobile app. AChoiredTaste.com
After reading through this entire thread twice, I get the impression you aren't aware of the required warm-up cycle. Once you push that HV/EV button, it will force the engine to start and will continue running until coolant reaches the necessary temperature for emission cleansing. If there is something wrong with your coolant (low, dirty, clogged) or your thermostat (unable to shut), you may not be able to get back into EV mode.
Just to be clear, regardless of what's on the screen (the dot matrix VFD), there should be a green "EV Mode" light above the speedometer, just like the Eco/Pwr lights, when you engage EV Mode. Regen stops at 10 km/h and below. I suspect the problem could be a bad connection somewhere, but there could be something about EMI conditions within the car that allow it to function at lower speeds.
i read you are over seas and have a JDM PIP with 100,000 k on the odometer. I doubt the JDM would be programmed that much differently than a US model, but only the owners manual or shop manual could confirm if that behavior is normal for your model. I suspect one of two things, for what it's worth to you from me sitting here thinking. One, a malfunction somewhere. Two, the car got used to being driven one way for 100,000 k and refuses to change it's behavior right away. If it were my PIP I'd try driving it one or two 50k trips in POWER one or two trips in ECO and one or two trips in NORMAL without touching the HV/EV button. I'd also check the Owners Manual for the JDM description of the EV/HV button. If neither reading the manual or running the PIP in the different modes of 50k helps at all, I'd look into getting a JDM shop manual.
Yes , if I get a long down hill I get regen, once i managed 10 kms EV range from zero EV range going down a pretty long and steep hill. If I don't get into EV and still have EV range then it depletes only if I keep on driving within the EV limit (very light on the peddle till Middle of the bar). But once the engine starts (crossing the middle line of the bar) Then I gain a little EV range doesn't loose any. Gain is not significant, it's hardly 0.2 , 0.4 kms. And it's mostly through regen. Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
No, I do get the warm up cycle. But during the warm up cycle the EV light alongside the the PWR and ECO keeps on lit if the car is in EV mode and the bar has no middle line in it , but the big EV car sign above the bar changes to an outline during the warm up cycle. It's cold around here so warm up happens quite frequently. I think I understand the difference between being in EV mode and HV mode. Regardless of engine starting. Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
is it worth saying that someone is going to have to do the translation to be able to fix the issue(s) properly? it must be fun seeing all those messages in jpn.
@hieronymous has already confirmed the expected behaviour of a JDM Prius PHV is no different from other markets, we don't need to translate the manual. It sounds like something is faulty to me, possibly just a bad connection with the EV/HV button.
Yes. I was wondering is it possible to swap the connection with one of the other buttons? I'm not sure if it's just one large block connector for the three buttons there, but it is easy to get access to that area.
Well thanks a bunch guys. The issue has been resolved. I came to the conclusion with the help of you guys that the switch is probably faulty. So went ahead and got hold of a tech and told him so. He hooked up a diagnostic scan which showed position of all the switches etc. And there it was the EV switch permanently switched ON. Pressing it and everything didn't make a difference. So he pulled the switch out and then after comparing it with other switches showed me that the switch is working but the wiring has some issue that is keeping it at high all the time. So he came to the conclusion that the switch is fine , the wiring has some sort of bad signal in it. Well after 2 hours of tracing the culprit was the after market parking sensors that were installed on the car from Japan but after market. The wires behind the rear bumper were creating the issue. Sooo long story, but eventually he fixed it. Now the button is behaving as it should be. Pressing it switches the car into EV and vice versa. Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
Hey guys. I know it's not the right place for this question, but I couldn't find the thread. So I meant to ask, what's the oil change interval you guys are keeping. Since you charge the pip every night / day. So doesn't it increases the oil change interval since the engine only runs those many EV miles less that's on the odometer. Thanks Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
The schedule calls for 10,000 miles or (iirc) one year, whichever is first. That's using synthetic, which is pretty much the only way to get the specified 0W-20 oil. Theoretically, you could stretch the miles based on your percentage of EV miles. Still, my schedule with the PiP was 7,500 miles. I have always changed sooner than spec and never had an oil burner.