Hi: I am getting 2008 carvana certified prius in $8500. It has only 67K miles on it. Initially I thought that it was a good deal but later when I searched the web I found several bad reviews from users on the hybrid battery of prius. So, I wanted to check with the forum experts - should I be investing money in almost 10 year old car ? What is the normal prius battery life ? Appreciate your help !
Based on the limited publicly available statistics we can access (mainly from here and True Delta, although an occasional Consumer Reports article also helps), almost all Prius batteries last at least 10 years and 100,000 miles without problems. After that point, failure rates are approximately 3% for an 11-14 year old car, and increasing up to 15% for the oldest Prii (that's the plural of Prius! ) on the road today. So if you buy a 10-year-old Prius, you've got a roughly 3% chance that the battery will fail in the next 4 years, up to a 15% chance that the battery will fail in the 3 years after that, and (assuming an exponential decay rate) most likely a 50% chance the battery will fail in the 5-6 year period after that. So basically, if your Prius is: less than 10 years old, your battery has less than 1% chance of failing 10-14 years old, your battery has approximately a 3% chance of failing 15-17 years old, your battery has up to a 15% chance of failing 18+ years old, your battery could fail at a coin flip (50%) So it depends on how long you plan to have the vehicle. I'd feel comfortable driving a well-maintained Prius that's up to 14 years old without question, so if you bought a 2008 Prius now, that gives you a very good chance of 4 years of ownership, and a good chance of up to 7 years of ownership before the battery is likely to be a concern. Of course, some batteries will fail early, and some will last way longer than anyone expects, but the averages I listed (except for cars over 18 years old, since there aren't any of those around yet) are accurate to the best of the collective reporting of True Delta and Prius Chat based on my analysis.
Mine is still ticking and it is an 08. At 164k miles. Youre in luck. Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
Thank you for the response. I went ahead and purchase it with the 7 day return policy. It is running fine so far. I did try to test the HV battery using the torque app and OBD2 scanner. Need some help from the forum experts on the results. I would really appreciate if the forum experts can take a look at the results and let me know the battery status. With my very limited knowledge it looks okay to me. Attached is the screen shot of HV battery fitness and the link to the complete HV battery test results with all the graphs - p.p1 {margin: 0.0px 0.0px 13.0px 0.0px; font: 13.0px Helvetica}
I noticed the link did not go thru, so posting the battery block and battery block delta graphs - Appreciate your help !
heat plays a large part in early hybrid battery failures. national statistics are skewed by northern vehicles. i wold start putting aside $3-4,000. for an eventual new battery.
Any rough idea on when it would start giving me problem ? my 7 day return policy is going to end tomorrow and I am not able to decide whether to return it and look for corolla/civic OR keep it. If i can get 3-4 years from prius with no major issues then I am fine keeping it. How reliable the torque battery test ? Any thoughts on the test results that I posted ?
we've never seen anyone or anything able to predict battery longevity, not even roughly. there is a self made test by a pretty bright guy here, but i'm not sure of the predictive accuracy. sorry, i can't help with the graphs and charts, hopefully someone more knowledgable will chime in.
Would really appreciate if you let me know the self made test that you have mentioned in your post OR any key word thru which I can search the forum for the same.
Congratulations on your Prius, I hope you enjoy the car. If you keep it for several years, you'll probably have to fix some things. They may or may not be your battery. Every new owner seems to spend inordinate effort trying to figure out when the battery will fail (that included me, first time I bought a Prius), and nowhere near as much time or effort doing the same speculations about the other wear items in the car. I bought my first Prius when it was seven years and 125,000 miles old, and drove it to fifteen years and 234,000, during which time I replaced two wheel bearings, some brake and suspension parts, and one door hinge. The battery never gave me trouble, though I understand the next owner did replace it. I'm on my second Prius, and I think by now I am over the urge to agonize over my battery any more than over any other wear aspect of the car. Just put some money to a repair fund, for whatever repairs happen to come. The one early sign of anything I've seen in this car so far is a slightly reduced compression in cylinder 2. -Chap
Thank you, ChapmanF. I am feeling much better after reading your post I am sorry but what is reduced compression in cylinder 2 ? I went to local repair shop this evening to have the trained eyes examine the car, and they only saw code P0303 in history but said the engine is not currently misfiring. Is this code related to the reduced compression that you have mentioned ?
Just a quirk of my particular Prius. Don't stress about low compression in your Prius, unless you happen to measure low compression in your Prius. I like to take some basic vital stats as soon as practicable after buying a car, so I have a baseline to compare to later. Right after I bought this one (at about 110,000), I started by measuring the brake linings, quick and easy to do. Measuring compression in a Prius is a PITA, so I put that off until doing my spark plug replacement at 120,000 (which is also a PITA, for all the same reasons). So that's when I took my first, baseline, compression measurements, and noticed that while 1, 3, and 4 came out with virtually identical numbers (excellent!), 2 was a bit lower, though still within the tolerance for variation between cylinders. The engine runs smoothly with no codes and no sign of any trouble, and I wouldn't know about this any other way than taking the measurement. It is just a single fact about my particular Prius, for me to keep in the back of my mind, possibly to test again in a few years and see how it's changed. If you feel like copying any of how I maintain my Prius, copy the "take early baseline measurements of things and compare occasionally" part. Don't copy the worry about any particular measurements I get on my car. Remember the measurements you get on your car. -Chap p.s. I see you have a Gen 2; I think compression measurements are less of a PITA for you.
Your charts look good. All module voltages (first chart) are very close to each other during the discharge portion of the test. The delta V between modules looks to be about 0.1v in the later chart. That battery appears to be in pretty good shape. The delta V is an important indicator. As the battery wears and becomes unbalanced, that number will increase. You'll also be able to see it in the first chart, as the chart lines (module voltages) will start to separate from each other instead of almost laying on top of each other. Here's some graphs from a load test I did on a Gen 2 built with Gen 3 modules today. You can see in the first screen capture that the starting SOC was about 65 and about 45 at the end of the load test.
Pretty sure @bisco was talking about the @S Keith thread below: How to test HV battery state of health on your Gen 2 (answer) | PriusChat Wish there was a way to convince 'S Keith' to come back and grace us with his presence once again
Thank you, SFO for providing the link for the test. I tested the battery as per the instructions with the outside temp at 75F. I got full 8 bar and then turn the max fan, Low AC, rear def and low beam on with the foot on the parking brake and car in R mode....and the ICE started just after 4 min 45 secs which is 4.75 in decimal. So, my battery pack is at 45% (4.75 * 9.5%) which is obviously not good . I am going to call the dealer to arrange the return Thank you all so much for all the help.
Before you return the car, EJS279, consider this: BU-1002a: Hybrid Electric Vehicles and the Battery – Battery University There was a study comparing hybrid batteries when new and at 160,000 miles. The above link has a graph. Prius batteries in the study were only 39% at 160,000 miles but there was minimal impact on fuel economy. If battery wear was linear, then 45% after 9 years means the battery will likely last another 7 years before it dies. Are you saying 7 years is too short a time to own your Prius? It's longer than most people own cars today. I'd urge you to reconsider.
That doesn't sound bad at all for that age. What you're seeing appears to be reduced overall capacity because of the cells gradually getting out of balance. Easily remedied with a Prolong Grid charger, which helps extend the life of the battery. I've been using one for years and many others do as well. I learned about it from the shop where I bought my last four Prii where they specialize in hybrids and electrics. Many threads here about it.
While MovingRightAlong makes a good case, Toyota has been modifying the battery with each generation, so the jump in older Prius battery failures may be because of an older design, rather than just age of the batteries themselves. (most likely both) The same can work the other way, the Gen 4 chemistry does not build on Gen 1 to Gen 3 chemistry, so the history of past Prius is no indicator of Gen 4 longevity.