dr prius lithuim modules problems

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by mikweb73, Jun 14, 2023.

  1. mikweb73

    mikweb73 Junior Member

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    back to winter again and having problems again , after about 18000 miles and perfect performance with no problems on the new gen 2 li battery packs . from using scanning tools streaming live data while i drive i have learned a lot about why these packs are failing , and it appears not to be the fault of the manufacture of the packs themselves . it appears to be limitations of the chemistry of the li cells changing function with low and high temperature being severely different from that of the metal hydride batteries they replace and how the prius gen 2 computer handles it and does its diagnostic tests , which can prove seriously dangerous as it slams the electric motor into heavy regen then into heavy power assist essentially stomping on the brake then the accelerator back and forth for several minutes regardless if you are going around corners or maneuvering on ice etc. all without warning or requiring permission , it just starts doing it . that stupidity is on the toyota programmers and management. this of course starts happening at about freezing temperatures the li packs are designated by the prius computer as only being able to accept a charge or discharge at about 14kw even though the pack has close to normal voltages , ( i have seen charge and discharge rates at 60kw during normal operation ) , thus it surmises the pack cells are going bad and starts the test charge and discharge cycles to evaluate the extent of damage and if it needs to further restrict the packs use and turn on the red triangle of death and trouble codes. if the battery pack warms up enough it may decide the pack is still ok to use for now , if not , you get the codes. aside from the dangers of the prius oscillating slamming brakes and acceleration in icy conditions possibly while on curves or in problematic circumstances the rapid cycles of charge and discharge while the li cells are cold may damage the cells and thus later in summer when it gets hot , especially if your car was sitting out in the sun all day while you were at work and may get over 100 degrees ,and you try to drive home and end up going down a long steep hill overcharging an already damaged li battery pack it will then further be degraded to the point of actual cell failure ,
    in summary the prius computer needs to re programmed also for various other issues , ( i hate the traction control , it causes problems in wet weather ,and ice/ snow and on gravel and mud .) and the battery pack and controller needs to be tailored to mesh well with the prius programming and what it expects the battery data to be in any given situation if you for example put another pack in parallel you would in theory double the capacity and safe charge and discharge rate at any given temperature which would allow normal operation in more extreme temperatures but may not be the best solution especially considering cost and how much more temperature range that would give you .the probably most practical path is to add a 12v hair dryer ( or resistor heat pads between or in the modules ) into the battery cooling system with diffusers and sensors and a programmable microcontroller to coordinate it all to keep the battery pack within acceptable operating temperatures for the li chemistry and accept in winter you would have to wait a few minutes for it to warm the pack before turning on the car. summer is a bigger problem , possibly running multiple hoses from air conditioner to battery cooling system might work to cool the pack after car sitting in sun and when outside air temps over 100 degrees , but that may be a lot of work and expense and you would have to wait for it to cool before yo could drive. if the modules had aluminum around the cells and part of the case the time to heat and cool would be less and a 12v mini fridge could be rigged to cool it in summer necessitating less modding of the prius itself . but increased 12v use means a bigger 12v battery and charger. probably a modest increase in pack capacity with some of the other toned down optimized options may work well enough for most without too much cost or labor making it possibly doable and cost effective but that is a whole lot of a mess of things to figure out and test to be able to push out a reliable plug and play product to sell to consumers. thus the last i heard jack of dr. prius is exploring sodium batteries which are cheaper and their chemistry is better in extreme temperatures but the pack will be bulkier and weigh more then the li cells. i wish him luck and hope he gets it figured out soon .
     
  2. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    It’s entirely the fault of the manufacturer of the pack if an incompatible cell is used without proper nimh emulation and consideration of operating conditions.

    Completely incorrect

    First, no one outside of Toyota has the source code and they would tell you to use oem cells for reliability and safety.
     
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  3. mr_guy_mann

    mr_guy_mann Senior Member

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    Kudos to you.

    I am not going to read a post that long, that does not use basic English rules (paragraphs, punctuation, capitalization, etc.)

    The whole "babbling stream of consciousness" thing doesn't work for me.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
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  4. PriusCamper

    PriusCamper Senior Member

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    This is a very odd perspective that's sadly common in the US... Just about anywhere else in the world you can't survive without knowing more than one language and studies have found people who live in that reality are less quick to judge or dismiss and more likely to try harder to understand what someone is communicating and not jumping to conclusions and being patient.
     
  5. Ford Galaxie

    Ford Galaxie Member

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    Did you replace the buss bars?

    I have two of those NexPower lithium batteries in 2 Prius's. After almost two years I started getting hybrid battery code P080A.

    I replaced the buss bars. Haven't looked back since.
     
  6. highmilesgarage

    highmilesgarage Active Member

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    the gen1-gen3 were all tested by Prius engineers to use NiMh and don't care about aftermarket lithium ion batteries. It's the aftermarket's responsibility to make their product suitable to the Prius.. The only thing true is the gripe about traction control, I have the same issue with my Camry Hybrid and they actually fixed it in the next gen (adding the TC off button) I just roll my eyes when people exaggerate that Prius is their winter car.. winter is definitely not just snow and cold weather, it's the icy and slippery road and once you have TC enabled you're not going anywhere with it.
     
  7. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    There is a way to turn off traction control on a one off basis but it is not recommended you use it unless you’re stuck. Even then you want to turn it back on once you’re free.

    This works on a gen3 at a minimum.

    ———————

    Begin with the car off and parking brake engaged so you don’t roll. The parking brake engaged is not necessary for the traction control disable function.

    1. Turn the car to ignition mode by pressing START twice without pressing the brake.

    2. Floor the gas-pedal two times (two full top to bottom press)

    3. While pressing the brake put the car into NEUTRAL

    4. Again press the gas-pedal two times

    5. Push PARK followed by pressing the gas-pedal two more times

    6. Finally press the brake and press START one time.

    ———————

    Don’t drive in this mode. Shut off system and restart as normal.

    Pic below:
    Prius v with traction control off. The yellow skid control light on the left is on. The yellow hybrid fault to the right is flashing. A hatchback will have a different display

    IMG_6825.jpeg
     
    #47 rjparker, Nov 30, 2024
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2024
  8. mikweb73

    mikweb73 Junior Member

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    thank you rjparker for the info on turning off traction control , i have tried to turn it off though the dr.prius app several times and it either turned back on later or it seems to have just turned it down a notch or two.
    from the some of the comments some people seem to react off first impressions or preconceptions instead of thuroughly reading the posts and dispassionately evaluating it considering the the various possibilities of what someone is trying to convey etc. as some have completely misconstrued what i posted and one essentially implied i am a liar . ridiculous .
    i say its toyotas fault for the stupidity of not making its test or hv battery reconditioning cycles of regen/braking and discharge/acceleration , only happen on direct authorization by the driver or at least after adequate warning and time for the driver to be in a good situation , prepared for it , not as happened to me twice , going around a corner in the rain and Changning lanes in the rain where an off ramp is right after an on ramp where cars are constantly criss crossing each others path and many accidents normally occur and more warning signs keep getting added because of that fact. i did not blame toyota for lithium ion aftermarket problems.
    i also was merely saying i did not blame the manufacturer of the lithium ion pouch cells or nexcell or jack or dr.prius for bad or defective manufacture of the physical products of the battery components themselves, Because the cells and the modules have worked perfectly well when they are within a mild temperature range and live up to the performance claims . the 2nd generation of the li modules seems to have solved prior overcharging problems to better protect the cells. therefore performance and quality of the components are good and not the problem. with the little tinkering and experience i have so far it seems to me there was not enough understanding and experimentation with how the prius programming manages the hv battery and how that would affect battery performance in freezing and hot temperatures and how the prius computer would deal with it and in turn what the computer would do affects battery cells. if you live in a relatively mild climate and flat driving conditions you would never see a problem and not expect to see one by using li cells by looking at data sheets of performance claims from cell manufacturers etc. and since toyota does not share programming code and details of what the prius battery management computer does exactly, it would be hard to be expected to know in advance how the programming would affect performance or cell health of li cells. however this is where experience tells you to play devils advocate and rigorously test all relevant extremes of variables involved that prospective customers would reasonably experience, so as to know for a fact the end results of operation in all the combination of reasonable circumstances. thus having the relevant data on hand to be able to competently decide if it is worth using li cells . this would also involve testing fixes for problems discovered during these real world tests, such as a way to heat the cells in cold weather and cool them in summer when your car has been baking in the parking lot all day. then of course testing those fixes. then designing efficient manufactured product that is economical and plug and play as possible. however to do all the real world testing and refining of all that is expensive and time consuming which would mean people in mild climates and driving conditions that will not have problems would not see these li cells for several additional years and at greater expense. so basically we went in on a beta product and are the real testers and the product has and hopefully will evolve to cover more extreme conditions that some of us experience.
    as to the comment about the bus bars , they are definitely not the problem , i have a fair amount of electrical experience and refurbished the original hydride pack and its components and got a second one and refurbished it and bought replacement hydride modules and installed them in place of bad ones . so when the pack in the prius became unusable due to bad modules i swapped in the ready to go back up then swapped out bad modules in the on that failed. this worked quite well but was an extreme pain in the but as i had to swap modules out every 3 months because i did not just get all new cells to begin with, went the cheap rout with good shape used cells to replace the packs original ones dying of at the end of their life span, i should have at least just replaced all the original cells with the good refurb ones. so. at the time i was trying to decide between all new cells and good refurbs i saw the initial nexcell replacements and went in on it. now i am considering new hydrides or refurb hydrides , if i cannot hillbilly rig a heater for the pack.
    the problem started when freezing temps hit long enough to drop pack temps in the core of the pouches and because i was monitoring live data i saw the computer throw trouble codes noting pack possibly bad and it was pending decision of triangle of death on an evaluation period ( during which the pack was restricted to 14kw charge and discharge and performance changed ) , then it did the test/reconditioning attempt , then declared the pack bad and red triangle of death appeared. then i used the obd2 tool to clear the codes and history . which made it run normally on the 2nd half hour of my drive home without problems. i also noted the battery temps increased , possibly enough to restore performance. and most importantly i noticed the charge/discharge test/reconditioning allowed the hv battery to charge to 100% and probably well past as i was monitoring live charge data , volts and amps going in as well as the displayed estimated state of charge.
     
  9. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    Startups DO have to take responsibility for the total integration, safety and reliability of all the components that make the final product. No excuses and no blaming the customer. When the startup company has few assets and the principal’s own assets are protected by the company LLC, they have little to lose and plenty to gain at the customer’s expense if the first generations fail.
     
    #49 rjparker, Nov 30, 2024
    Last edited: Nov 30, 2024
  10. mikweb73

    mikweb73 Junior Member

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    in response to rjparkers last post , i agree totally . however i was explaining i sympathize with the entrepreneur's situation in trying to start a business on a helpful and worthwhile product that will help a lot of people with less than ideal financial backing and logistics and everything necessary to really do it right in the first gen of the product ,and thus having to make less than ideal development decisions.
     
  11. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    As it is around the right time of year to repeat the PSA, when you are driving a Prius in snow, the aim is to look like one of these guys:





    and not look like this guy:



    All that ice-polishing will rarely be helpful toward getting where you want to go, and can end up getting you very decisively stuck.

    Generally, people whose driving is more like the first two examples are more likely to report that the car's traction control is useful to them, and people whose driving is more like the third are more likely to report that the traction control needs fixing with an off button.
     
  12. mikweb73

    mikweb73 Junior Member

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    in response to chapmanf's latest post the first video was watchable the two below were just pictures, but i think i know what you are getting at , however i have a 1st gen honda civic hybrid without traction control and an f450 4x4 diesel dually and i skid steer and a kawasaki mule utv and a quad and drove various other vehicles and i rarely spin the tires but most of the times in the prius usually in the rain ,the traction control is a detriment , it would be much better with an off button and you should be able to adjust the settings so it doesnt cut and then pour power back on so suddenly and give you a power bar representation of where the slipping point is occurring . in winter i run studded deep lug snow tires and carry chains in both my daily drivers . i do not like spinning tires especially with studs in snow tires that get destroyed fast, and then i have to pull them off and pull studs and put new ones in if the pockets are not destroyed. however there are some situations on wet gravel and mud going up the rear road to park the cars to clear the driveway i cannot get the prius up the hill but the honda with its 1st gen slippy cvt does using momentum and at the end spinning tires . the prius cuts out and causes premature slipping and losing momentum. and there have been many other instances where the traction control has proved less than helpful.
     
  13. highmilesgarage

    highmilesgarage Active Member

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    so, correct me if am wrong..

    are you saying that the collective brains of Toyota engineers with their testing equipment is no match to yours and data you get from Dr Prius? or what you posted is just merely an opinion on what you've observed?
     
  14. mikweb73

    mikweb73 Junior Member

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    in response to highmilesgarage 's post :
    history has many examples of big companies with teams of professional engineers getting things catastrophically wrong in final products let alone more minor stuff . due to many reasons one of which being arrogance of said engineers thinking they are smarter than the people who use their products and so do not bother to design the products in a way that allows users more control and options as they feel the users would screw something up or be pointless as the engineers knowing everything accounted for everything and their designs are perfect .also many of the decisions are made by managers not engineers . engineers may have been able to make a far better product as history has shown they did in prototype stages , however managers under financial pressures and marketing decisions for timing of product releases and all sorts of other reasons not involving engineering or product quality or functionality win out and result in flawed products being pushed out . that being said toyota has a track record of making very well engineered vehicles , some of the best , very reliable , etc. however they do drop the ball on a few things here and there . but they are not alone , most of the car industry similarly makes products that gives users very little control or ways to monitor or change options or inner workings details, for proprietary reasons sometimes , but also to benefit dealerships , and to prevent users from having a "negative" experience by screwing something up d.y.i.. as some experts put it.
    the end results of the obvious facts i observed are what they are and have nothing to do with the collective brains of toyota engineers or their testing equipment versus my brain and what i got from the dr prius app. although usually a good debating tactic to try to frame it as a ridiculous comparison . is shows more your bias or your lack of understanding of what i posted or the situation , or some personal problem of yours that you are venting. for your information i did not use the dr. prius app on many of these occasions because the obd2 dongle is use for it died so i had to use one of the various others i have that are tied to specific software some of which i carry in the car ready to go with a tablet to use with them for such occasions such as x tool which has more professional level functions and when i want to have better data i can use my launch profession obd2 tool which has all the functions mechanics shops and dealerships have available, which cand simultaneously record and graph and superimpose many data streams. i do all my own mechanic work . i by wrecked cars for a few hundred dollars and most of a whole cars worth of spare parts instead of going to a pick and pull for a few hundred dollars per component etc . . i have bought heavy equipment at auction nonfunctional and fixed electrical and mechanical problems to get them working to be able to build a 30 foot tall building i designed and built myself . i have in my younger years worked on sailboats and yachts in mexico doing mechanic work , fixing electrical problems and installing radars , autopilots and power distribution systems . i have also more recently operated million dollar plus press brake machines professionally which when they are working right are great , very precise and consistently form good parts , until some sensor of the thousands on the machine thinks something is wrong and shuts down operation . the programming is overly restrictive to protect the machine from "operator error" as engineers see it , and without overrides hurts production , and so we end up having to use the older basic machines a lot to actually get stuff done. so i am basically trying to convey i am not new to mechanical or electrical or automotive problems etc and i do have a good amount of experience and skills . there are gaps in my knowledge and experience relative to any one thing because i have done so many different things and i did not spend 4 or 6 years and pay about $200k to get a fancy paper saying i am an expert at some thing , but i still usually manage to figure things out and get it done like a lot of other people out there . I have met many people over the years that have degrees and paper saying they knew what they are doing and yet cannot seem to get it done , they may be good with a text book or cad program but fail in the real world end product result . which results in many common stereotypes and sayings throughout many industries. and by the way in high school i was i.q. tested as having "superior"
    i.q. one point away from mensa membership.
    a person trying to use clout to win a debate or silence someone usually means they have no substance to their position . the only thing that is actually helpful to those who participate in these forums seeking information and solutions for their problems is the sharing of facts and ideas and research and experimentation to figure out what is causing something and what will fix it etc. , let's have more of that please , and less debate tactics and bias , and clout throwing , etc. .
     
  15. highmilesgarage

    highmilesgarage Active Member

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    it was a simple question answerable by "yes" or "no" and since I have an i.q. of 10 I usually doze off reading long sentences..
     
  16. PriusCamper

    PriusCamper Senior Member

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    That first video would stop just about everyone in snow country from considering buying a Prius...
     
  17. PriusCamper

    PriusCamper Senior Member

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    It was a mistake to call it traction control... It's actually a system designed to protect the drivetrain from the damage that could be caused by the significant Torque the electric motor generates when car loses traction. If you turn traction control off you might destroy your dampener or other parts of your drivetrain.
     
  18. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The algorithm appears designed to take driver input a bit into account. When given a go-pedal input that is reasonably close to the available traction limit, the system helps to fine-tune and determine the limit and stick close to it. However, if the driver gives a larger go-pedal input, the system will try to respond accordingly, and that's when people report the less useful big-dig, big-backoff, big-dig behavior. Your description "cut and then pour power back on" leaves little doubt that's what you've experienced.

    As an alternative, they could have designed a system that would pay less attention to driver input and just reach all its own conclusions about the available traction. ("I'm sorry, Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that.") But they designed it to have the driver input matter, letting the driver supply an initial reasonable guess at the available traction, so the car can more quickly converge to the right answer. If the driver's foot gives a big overestimate of the available traction, the car tries to obey that, and its response is thrown off by being out of the ballpark.

    In both of the first two videos (for me they are both YouTube embeds and both are playable the same way), it's clear that the driver is being careful to give a steady go-pedal input that is roughly suited to the available conditions, and the car (a gen 3 in the first video and a gen 2 in the second) is then able to find and track the actual limit, near where the driver hinted it was.

    There might be something interesting in designing a possible graphical display that could show the driver more clearly what's happening.

    ... which leaves more Prii for drivers like the one in the video, who is seen reaching the top of the drive, where a person determined to polish ice might be either still at the bottom, or slid off one side.

    That's an exact description of the system in gen 1 (2001–2003), but not of gen 2 and later.
     
  19. PriusCamper

    PriusCamper Senior Member

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    How did it change in Gen2? Is the change also why Gen2 stators are so much more reliable compared to Gen1?
     
  20. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Starting in gen 2 it cooperates with selective brake application, in just the way you'd expect for not-just-tranny-protection traction control.

    I don't think I've ever stumbled on any suggested connection between that change and the stator longevity. I think they made some changes to stator construction too. (And gen 2 is a lighter-gauge, lower-current, higher-voltage stator; gen 1 didn't have the boost converter, so the motors ran at battery voltage.)
     
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