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None of the buttons on my Steering wheel work, along with the cruise control

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Audio and Electronics' started by priusvid, Oct 28, 2018.

  1. priusvid

    priusvid Junior Member

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    Hey Gang,

    None of the buttons on my Steering wheel work, along with the cruise control. Just wondering if anyone can point me in the right direction or have a fuse location.

    Thank you very much.
     
  2. Raytheeagle

    Raytheeagle Senior Member

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    Clock spring sounds like it failed.

    Buy a good quality one.
     
    VFerdman likes this.
  3. VFerdman

    VFerdman Senior Member

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    Agree with Ray. Clockspring is the number one suspect. It's the wire that is coiled up like a clockspring in a mechanical watch. This wire is inside the steering wheel and is a fairly simple item to replace DIY. Best of luck!
     
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  4. priusvid

    priusvid Junior Member

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    Thank you very much guys :)
     
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  5. priusvid

    priusvid Junior Member

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    Bought one on eBay for $15, taking a risk on a cheapy, will let y’all know
     
    Raytheeagle likes this.
  6. VFerdman

    VFerdman Senior Member

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    I have read diverging reports about the cheap clocksprings. Some say stay away from them and others, with lots of professional repair experience say the cheap ones and expensive ones are the same and the difference is in certifications a brand name has to get in order to connect to an airbag. I would make sure to buzz the cable with a continuity probe on every conductor before installing and if it's all good would not worry about it too much. Also, follow installation instructions properly as improper installation can lead to early failure.

    Good luck!
     
  7. exstudent

    exstudent Senior Member

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    My $ is on OP will be replacing clockspring again. Others before him have gone cheap and regretted it.

    I would have hoped OP's life is worth more than $15.

    If you have dependents, increase your life insurance policy.

    Toyota trying to locate “thousands” of counterfeit airbag parts that could prove deadly in a crash
    "... internal testing in Japan found there were four ways they could fail to deploy an airbag in a crash."

    “high likelihood of insufficient conductivity to support airbag deployment electrical current” and “significant risk of airbag non deployment in an accident”.

    counterfeit part does not have gold plated connectors, the crimping of the cable is not strong enough and it does not use copper wire as per the genuine article. The plastic locking tabs are also “poorly formed” or misaligned.​

    1) You get what you pay for.
    2) Certification = testing = reliability = lives saved (assuming its not a defective Takata Air Bag). The imitation junk from Panda Land (China) lack quality control, testing, and are always made with the cheapest materials (to maximize their profits at your expense).


    This reminds me of people who buy Panda Land auto fuses b/c its cheap. They later pay for it dearly with damaged equipment and wire harness. Watch this auto fuse testing from Weber State's Automotive Department.
     
    #7 exstudent, Nov 4, 2018
    Last edited: Nov 4, 2018
  8. LEVE

    LEVE Member

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    A month ago all the buttons on my steering wheel failed within about 100 miles. A year ago I purchased an $8 clockspring off Ebay. Yeah, it was cheap.. but I like cheap.

    So, I got a year out of it, almost to the day. When I took the clockspring apart I found no failure in the ribbon cable. I'm still looking for the failure points.

    This time, I cheaped out again.. and purchased not one, but TWO $8 clocksprings. One is now sitting in the Prius' tray above the spare tire. Hey, you never know, just in case I need to change it on the fly, it's there. It's one of the easiest jobs you can do on a Prius. I hope to get at least 13 months out of the new one.
     
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  9. priusvid

    priusvid Junior Member

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    I just did mine and it fixed all the buttons but the wheel is off-center, do you know how I fix that ? Thx
     
  10. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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