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Going up steep gravel driveway

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by adaprill, Oct 13, 2007.

  1. adaprill

    adaprill New Member

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    I've had my wonderful Prius for two weeks, and I absolutely love it! But there is one problem. At our summer house there is a very steep unpaved driveway with a lot of loose stones. Most cars go up it okay in low gear. But I can't downshift the Prius, and I have a very hard time getting it up the driveway. The wheels spin on the stones if I give it a lot of gas. It goes up the steepest hills on roads without seeming to notice, but it really does not want to climb that driveway. Any ideas? My old underpowered Buick (which whimpered at hills in its old age) went up the driveway better than my snazzy new Prius. HELP!
     
  2. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    That's the aggressive traction control. We have the same problem at our lake house. It'll stall, seem to stop, then go, then slow. And I have an '04 and the TRAC is more aggressive than on the '07.

    As long as it gets up the hill don't sweat it, nothing's wrong, the car's just trying to prevent overspin and damage to the HSD. If you can get a little speed going before you hit the steep part that'll help a bit.

    After thoughts...
    1) I have a friend with an '07 Prius and they had no trouble at all...no spinning/stalling...climbing my hill in their car.
    2)Better tires than the OEM Integrities help a bit too...when you're ready to upgrade.
     
  3. Bob64

    Bob64 Sapphire of the Blue Sky

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    Perhaps consider paving the driveway?
     
  4. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Bob64 @ Oct 13 2007, 10:26 PM) [snapback]525329[/snapback]</div>
    Maybe someday, but for a little sputtering to get up the drive the cost of paving and maintaining a 1/4-1/3mile of driveway would be pretty excessive for a place we use a couple times a month and are trying to keep cost down on as much as possible.
     
  5. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Taking some air out of the tires should help also.
     
  6. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(usbseawolf2000 @ Oct 13 2007, 11:14 PM) [snapback]525342[/snapback]</div>
    Sinner! :D
     
  7. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(efusco @ Oct 14 2007, 12:17 AM) [snapback]525345[/snapback]</div>
    I mean pump them back up once you reach the top.

    Another suggestion is to gain momemtum first.
     
  8. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(usbseawolf2000 @ Oct 13 2007, 11:22 PM) [snapback]525346[/snapback]</div>
    Redemption is yours, go forth, in stealth, and sin no more.
     
  9. richard schumacher

    richard schumacher shortbus driver

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(catdancer @ Oct 13 2007, 09:59 PM) [snapback]525323[/snapback]</div>
    Have you tried going up at 1 MPH? The nature of the drive train makes it impossible to stall a Prius engine. Get a running start at the highest speed you can safely achieve, and then let it slow down as you climb, all the way down to 1 MPH if necessary. Do this smoothly enough and you may avoid triggering the traction control.
     
  10. patsparks

    patsparks An Aussie perspective

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    I'd try to hit the bottom of the driveway running, I don't mean hitting the bumper on the ground fast but make sure you keep the car moving at a constant speed all the way up. You may need to approach so you turn left into your driveway to maintain momentum then a steady throttle all the way to the top.

    It works on dirt roads anyway.

    Failing that, how about reversing up? Don't worry that you need a lot of throttle to get up the drive, I think the prius is set up to not have excessive torque in reverse. I'm not sure that will work but may be worth a shot.
     
  11. adaprill

    adaprill New Member

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    Thanks to all for your suggestions. Unfortunately the house is at the bottom of the driveway, so there is only a short distance to gain momentum before it gets steep, but I suspect replacing the tires would help a lot. The spouse is too upset about what I spent on the car to allow for paving the driveway (300 feet long), so I'll just keep working on my technique. You folks are the greatest. I haven't posted before but have been reading for some time and have learned a lot. Again thanks.
     
  12. donee

    donee New Member

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    Hi Catdancer,

    Getting as much speed as possible before the steep section is a good idea because it minimizes the torque you need on the steep section.

    And you can only provide as much torque as the tire/gravel interface will allow. If that interface slips, the traction control kicks in.

    So, the best thing is to gas it as much as possible on the flat portion, then get your foot completely off the gas as you coast onto the the incline at speed. Press down on the throttle pedal very gently and get the power back up just enough to maintain momentum. You might try this with the windows down, so you can hear the sound change from the tires on the gravel, just before they slip.

    The Prius has all sorts of low-end torque, and its easy to break traction with it on sub-standard surfaces (such as damp or spinable man-hole covers, gravel and greasy road surfaces). So, keep your eyes pealed on the road, as well as the traffic. Which is good advice in any car.
     
  13. David Beale

    David Beale Senior Member

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    One further data point. Replacing the tires with "REAL" tires makes a huge difference. The stock Goodyear Integrities are "adequate", but they are cheap tires. I put Nokian WR tires on my Prius and the difference in gravel is like night and day. BTW, I "threw away" the stock tires, even though they were almost new (10,000 km on them).

    The reason for all this was I need good winter capable tires as I live where we have 6 months of winter. So I replaced the stock tires with Nokian WRs. I was actually shocked at the difference in handling, both on pavement and gravel.
     
  14. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    My 04 would probably give up on your driveway, just come to a stop and refuse to budge, even with the gas pedal right to the mat. The first year I had it, some co-workers and I went on a little fishing trip to a tourist camp in NW Ontario.

    My Prius refused to climb one steep hill, although a co-worker with a VW Golf tdi and 5 speed had no trouble whatsoever. The other co-worker with a Lexus SUV hooked up a tow strap to the emergency towing eyelet and pulled me up.

    The stock Integrity tires are crap. If you value your life - especially on a rain soak highway - ditch them ASAP
     
  15. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    I didn't realized you have a 07 model. You shouldn't have issues in 04 and 05's over sensitive traction control.

    Remember, the electric motor torque response is very fast. There is no "sling shot" effect and delay like automatic transmission. Press the accelerator slowly in control. You will be able to move fairly easily. If the wheel slips, don't panic. You know now the torque limit on the road. Try again and give less torque to the wheel next time.
     
  16. adaprill

    adaprill New Member

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    I asked at the garage (not a Toyota dealer) about Nokian WR tires, and they can get them for me, but they suggested Winterforce snow tires as a cheaper alternative. Anybody have any experience with them?
     
  17. daveleeprius

    daveleeprius Heh heh heh you think so?

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    Maybe this was already thought of but did you think of backing up the hill? The Prius can't use the gas engine to back up a hill, it's a pure electric car backing up :) so maybe this would work?
     
  18. mrderik

    mrderik New Member

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    Greetings -

    In one of the past posts i read earlier today it was mentioned that reverse is powered ONLY by the electric motor and therefore may not have the oomph, (or battery life) to do an extended reverse up a steep incline. When I read that, I said ah-ha! This summer I tried reversing up my driveway (which is a 12-14% incline and almost 1/4 mile long). The car came to a near stop part way up and I got nervous so went back down to the bottom and drove up forward. When I got to the top there was a distinct odor of heated electrical components - so I don't try that anymore.

    Mine is gravel as well, and of course now frozen. The stock tires did fine in the summer but were a joke after our first snow so I got some good 'snow' tires and it's still pretty easy, so long as you get a little head start. However, my driveway is covered in 'fines' (similiar to D-1) which is a mix of small rock 'chips' and sand that pack really hard, making a relatively smooth, not necessarily flat, surface. My neighbors' driveway is just as steep but his is covered with a more coarse 'pit run' gravel which is more like small, loose, rounded stones - and his is VERY challenging to get up.

    So while the cost of 'paving' might be out of the question, you might look into just skimming it with a finer D-1 type topping that will probably help a great deal.

    Derik
     
  19. adaprill

    adaprill New Member

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    Everyone,

    Sorry for the delay in reporting back. I got the Nokian WR tires, and they made a huge difference. The Prius still hates going up that hill, but it does it now -- no more backing down and starting over. I even got up once without the running start, although that was pretty iffy -- about 1 mph as I crested the hill. Even with my husbands all-wheel-drive Subaru we walk up and down (actually down and up) in the winter anyway. But it's nice to know that the Prius will make it up in non-winter conditions.

    Catdancer
     
  20. grapegrower

    grapegrower New Member

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    Just sharing our experience: Last evening my wife and I dropped off our daughter at house we had never been to. We took our 2008 Prius with 4k miles on it. The house was at the bottom of a steep hill and the access was a gravel road. Going down was fine. But coming back up the hill was a hair raising experience. Pacific NW, wet steep gravel road, near midnight and raining, out of cell phone coverage, no street lights, foggy windows, mountain on right, drop off on left to river, no guard rails ... you get the picture.

    Good momentum till I slowed for some pot holes. When the tires started spinning, the TC kicked in and we were stuck. Backing down 1/8 mile to a flat area to start over was not on my list. So I tried a few times to get thru the pot holes.

    Each time, I held the accelorator down but when the tires started to spin, the engine would disengage and the car would come to a stop, After a 1/2 second or so, the sequence would repeat: spin, disengage, reengage. However, without the ability to override the TC, we were stuck.

    I share this as an FYI. I agree with one poster that Toyota did this to "protect" the car but they definitely put their cargo at high risk. There is no warning in the owners manual about this. I was totally shocked at the behaviour of this car. And for once, my wife was right, "We should have taken the Suburban". :)