Why does my 2010 Prius have a harmonic balancer that is designed for a serpentine belt when the car does not have one? Silly question, please discuss...
Harmonic balancer - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia A Harmonic Balancer smooths torque pulses in the crankshaft. I do not see that having no belts would solve that, so you still need one.
But why is the outer portion of the harmonic balancer on my Prius machined to accept a serpentine belt...
I suspect it is cheaper for Toyota to carry one part number than two part numbers. They certainly use the engine block in many cars. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toyota_ZR_engine
That would be my guess. If they already have a vendor or vendors that create them in mass? Why create a whole new part that needs to be produced? 99.9% of the people are never going to know, or care that The Prius's harmonic balancer is machined to accept a serpentine belt it doesn't even have.... If it works...it works...
The title is perfect to ensure you read it. This has been brought up before. Not sure if a search would find it though. The belt part is there for sure to avoid making another part. The engine in the Prius is used in other Toyotas with some different parts to give a longer stroke/sudo Atkinson cycle. I suspect you would find the part number of the balancer the same as in a Corolla, for example.
Thats for the optional front PTO used for supporting Kubota implements including front loader, snowblower, blade, and rotary sweeper.
Inertia. One part. Several cars. Some of these cars require belts. Why the wonder? Now....if you want to wonder about something in a G3-II, ask why there is a photocell on the dash under the smoked plastic cover for a car that lacks automatic headlamps.
Could be.... After all they probably have a vehicle tilt compensator for the fuel gauge. A gauge that does not measure the bottom 20-percent of the tank!
Ok, I did some checking and couldn't find a sun load sensor, so that should be the light sensor. There's an interior temp sensor under the start button.
My Prius has a rain sensor. If it determines there is a chance of rain that day, it refuses to leave my garage Mike
And here I thought it was equipped with a light sensor that wouldn't let it even start unless it detected 15 hours and 30 minutes or more of daylight