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Does it hurt anything to Drive with Bad HV Battery

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Technical Discussion' started by deanatglobe, Feb 26, 2009.

  1. deanatglobe

    deanatglobe New Member

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    I have a 2002 Prius with a check engine light on. It is throwing codes P3000, P3006 and the Toyota dealer reported that one of the modules is reporting bad.

    It still is running okay, I can tell the battery is draining faster and charging faster than normal.

    Am I hurting anything to drive it while I decide what course of action to take. 4400 is the total replacement cost at the dealer, which is for the ECM and battery and labor. They say the battery is a new type and requires the new ECM.

    Thoughts?
    Dean
     
  2. a priori

    a priori Canonus Curiosus

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    You are beyond 150,000 miles?
     
  3. deanatglobe

    deanatglobe New Member

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    Nope, 137,000. But the California 150,000 mile warranty only applies to 2004+ models.
     
  4. a priori

    a priori Canonus Curiosus

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    Oh. Sorry about that.

    My guess is you'll be better served by finding an HV battery in salvage. This topic has come up several times before. If you are quite fortunate, you may find someone on PriusChat who is willing to help you replace the battery.
     
  5. deanatglobe

    deanatglobe New Member

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    Yeah I am leaning in the direction that it is not worth spending 4400 on a car with that many miles. So it is either a salvage battery or see what i can get on a trade in for it.
     
  6. Mike Dimmick

    Mike Dimmick Active Member

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  7. David Beale

    David Beale Senior Member

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    Driving with a bad module will probably hasten the demise of further modules (more charge/discharge cycles and higher charge/discharge currents).

    I hear from this site that the 2001-2003 used batteries are getting expensive (demand). I also hear some have been making a new battery by using modules from the 2004-present model. It takes two batteries to get enough modules ($400 each), and there will be physical implications as well as interfacing issues re sensors.

    The trade option may be your best bet. Many Toyota dealers have lots of new Prius in stock that they would like to move.
     
  8. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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  9. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Good, fast, cheap:: pick two of three.


    1. Battery replacement is good and fast.
    2. Swapping the traction battery by getting a salvage, is cheap and fast. You don't know how good that battery really is!
    3. Good and cheap means learning a lot more about NHW11 batteries than you every possibly wanted to know:

    Prius Battery Photos

    If this is your primary car and there is no backup, look at #1 as giving you a potentially 50 MPG (or whatever you are currently getting) for $4-4,500 (depending upon negotiating skills.)

    Swapping the traction battery can work but a used Prius NHW11 traction battery is somewhat iffy. Toyota changed the modules with the NHW20 and the new ones are much, much better. Regardless, you will need a smart NiMH charger such as a $150 RC, computer controlled one. You'll also need a couple of weeks depending upon your technical approach.

    Refurbishing the individual modules remains a very experimental technique that I have put aside for a while. The problem is the terminals in the NHW11 battery look to be weak and there is no easy way to 'toughen them up.' Normal internal pressures can lead to electrolyte leaks, which eat up the bus bar and eventually fail the battery. There is one highly experimental approach I've been thinking about but it is scary ... (ask me in "Prius Technical Stuff".)

    So life isn't easy and you need to make choices. If your transaxle oil looks good (you've been changing it, right?), a 50 MPG car for less than $5,000 looks like a steal to me. If you still don't like it in August when gas prices peak, sell it and get some of your money back.

    The swap of a slavage traction battery or get two, NHW20 batteries and charger to balance the cells would cut the price nearly in half but double or triple the down time. Sweat equity, it can be done and be half-way interesting.

    GOOD LUCK!
    Bob Wilson
     
  10. darelldd

    darelldd Prius is our Gas Guzzler

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    When you guys speak of bad "modules" you mean bad cells, I assume. There's just the one battery "module" in the Prius, yes?
     
  11. hobbit

    hobbit Senior Member

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    A module is one of the grey things, 6 cells, 7.2 nominal volts.
    A "block" is two modules, which is the granularity with which
    the battery ECU monitors things along the string. That's still
    enough to tell if a small portion of the string has gone bad.
    One big hazard after a cell goes bad somewhere in a block is that
    it's going to get reverse-charged fairly often, since it can no
    longer "push back" against all its neighbors with regard to handling
    charge and discharge current; that only makes things worse and
    you wind up with a region of high internal resistance in the
    middle of the string somewhere, basically making the whole pack
    unable to supply or accept enough current. Even if all the other
    cells around it are still good. But hopefully when a cell reaches
    that point the other cells are close to the same end-of-life
    point so it makes sense to change out the whole pack.
    .
    Some people *have* changed out one ailing module and had acceptable
    results that tides them over for a while, especially if it's
    relatively early in the car's life. I don't know the long-term
    success of such fixes.
    .
    It's starting to sound like trying to refurb NHW11 modules isn't
    so worthwhile, but the concept of building a pack from NHW20
    modules is pretty cool. They're slightly shorter so they should
    fit in the NHW11 case. Question: are they exactly the same length,
    as implied by Bob's photos? Would they require extensive mods to
    the case to make sure they stay in place, and don't swell, or are
    the original end-plates and battery box fittings sufficient?
    .
    _H*
     
  12. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    I think the module dimensions came up here and following in the same thread (somehow I think I also found dimensional specs somewhere with the same finding that the terminal-to-terminal (longest) dimension is about 10mm greater for the newer modules (though their height may, as I suspect you meant, be less).

    Of course the extra 10mm terminal-to-terminal would make me very cautious about putting the steel cover back over the bank. When I realized there are black plastic insulating covers to snap over the bus bars before the lid goes on, my concern about that abated some, and Bob Wilson did not seem to be concerned about it. I suppose you'd probably feel any interference between the plastic insulators and the lid while putting it on, and without blowing anything up. As long as there's ample clearance that shouldn't be a problem.

    I think the only other significant mechanical difference is that the old modules have a threaded insert in the bottom foot at each end, to be secured to the carrier plate by two machine screws per module. I think the new modules have the threaded insert for only one foot, and the carrier is stamped with lips to stick the threadless-foot-end of each module under, securing with one machine screw at the other end. I haven't seen one, but it must alternate lips and screw holes as the modules alternate direction.

    The old-style carrier plate won't have the necessary lips. But I can't imagine that once all the modules are secured by one foot screw each, mated to each other by their interlocking dimple/wart patterns, and clamped between the end plates, they'd be likely to go very far vertically. I haven't experimented.

    -Chap
     
  13. deanatglobe

    deanatglobe New Member

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    I ended up opting for trade and and new 2009 :). We love the car and a local dealer had 110 Prius on the lot, so he was in a dealing mood.

    Thanks for all the advice,
    Dean