unbolt the battery case, get some big strong friends or an engine hoist, and have at it! you're in missionary territory, all the best! (service manual probably details the procedure)
#desertdeals69 your profile shows Gen2 Prius. Is that the car you are asking about? Does it have a plug to charge the traction pack? If yes what kind of plug? If you're asking about a different car, what car are you asking about? If it's just a regular gen2 prius than that shouldn't be as difficult as it would be if there is a plug to worry about too.
I gave my wife the 09 and now I'm driving a 14 plug in. On a full charge the dash indicates 11.1-11.6 miles. 6 months ago it went as high as 13.4 miles. One difference is the air temp. It was 50-70 degrees in Dec to 91-117 degrees in Aug. I have 137,000 miles on the car. I just bought a complete battery from a 2015 with 67,000 miles and was just going to try it out. I am familiar with gen 2 batteries because I own 4 gen2s and have cycled and matched modules on 6 packs.
I'd be very interested in any and all you're willing to share, if and when you do the pack swap. I had a 14 PIP for a couple years and still remember some of the differences between the prime and its predecessor the PIP. I was the 350 something member of the blizzard brigade here at PC. I can see myself attempting a Prime pack swap one day in the distant future, possibly. if I live that long.....
Turn off the AC, then check the estimated range And remember it's an estimation based on previous journeys, it is not a useful indication of battery SOH in the slightest.
There are plenty of trick one can use in a PiP to up the EV estimate. And one has to describe their own definition of conservative driving in detail for context. I agree that an guessometer topping at 10+ EV miles is awful. In my 14 I used to get 12 in the coldest days of winter. But I would also drive in creephome mode 5-8 mph for a mile than under 35 for another mile to get the electric components warmed up sufficiently to keep the ICE from switching on at single digits F degrees and lower. ie describing how you define conservative driver is important.
Anything over 10 is good for me Totally depends on driving conditions and other factors. And as I said, not a reliable indication of battery health.
True. For me it means tires at 46/44 psi. Not using a/c. Slow acceleration. Anticipating stops so to use brakes as little as possible. Choosing secondary roads over highway. Driving below the speed limit when traffic allows, around here that generally means about 40 mph. Reminding the drivers behind me that the speed limit sign is for maximum, not minimum.
QuantumFirebird and Bisco are better references than I am. With my PiP I wanted to learn all the EV I could absorb and had the 999.9 mpg bug all the time. So the computers were filled with EV only miles and reflected that data on the gauges each time the car was driven.
I was only commenting on the reading after the charger shuts off. From 13+ TO 11.1 8 months later and 45 degrees warmer. I understand the ac uses some batery. I have a route that I do many times and there is quite a difference in mpg if I make all six lights or have to stop. I have another battery so I will change it out when it cools down to below 100.
if possible, document the whole job with pictures and commentary, that would be very helpful to the community, as some will likely need a new battery in the future.