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2010 Prius Solar Option - Horn No Longer Working...help?

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by bighouse, May 15, 2022.

  1. bighouse

    bighouse Active Member

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    OK, yesterday someone nearly ended my life by pulling out in front of me on a roadway- they did NOT have the right of way. I was able to step on my brakes and come to a very sudden stop- but it was close to being a collision. Of course, I also tried to lay on my horn as I was nearing the car- but my horn made no sound. I later looked at the fuse panels and see there's a 10A location for a horn fuse, according to the owner's manual (slot #4) but there was no fuse there. Also missing is the "S-Horn" relay. In reading the forum, it appears that the current for the horn is actually carried by another circuit (#4 is listed as NO CIRCUIT). Can someone tell me what I may need to replace on my fuse panel to check to see if I can get my horn working again? Is it simply a different relay, or is it that large white relay?
     
  2. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The S-Horn is a dedicated alarm-system horn ("security horn") and I think US-market cars just don't have it, hence the missing relay and fuse.

    The regular vanilla hey-watch-where-you're-going horns don't have a separate fuse or relay; they are controlled by the big white integration relay (which controls lots of other things too).

    The input to trigger the relay (HNSW) comes through the spiral cable behind the steering wheel, when you push on the airbag.

    Those spiral cables are known to wear out (except in a car that's only ever driven straight). If you try pressing and holding the airbag down and turning the steering wheel, and the horn beeps in some wheel positions and not others, that's a smoking gun for a spiral-cable problem.

    If you don't get the smoking gun, it could still be the spiral cable, or could be something else. Then you just grab a multimeter and the diagram and figure out what it is, and fix whatever that turns out to be.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  3. bighouse

    bighouse Active Member

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    Good to know! My horn works but ONLY if I push it at an exact location, that's in the lower left corner of the steering wheel/airbag pad. See the attached image and the red area that, if I push JUST there, it'll sound. s-l300 spot.jpg
     
  4. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    But does it sound when you push on that spot, regardless of how the wheel is turned?

    If so, the spiral cable is probably ok, and you've likely got something simple going on behind the airbag/pad.

    If I remember right, the horn contacts are open and exposed behind there. A set of them might be kind of oxidized or dirty, or there might even be something in the way back there, like a wire that happened to fold the wrong way when the pad was last installed.

    Should be pretty simple to find, but will mean taking the airbag out. Be sure to bone up on all the safety rules for that.
     
  5. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    So these cars have no horn pin ? It's all done in clock spring connector?
     
  6. bighouse

    bighouse Active Member

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    Yes, it sounds no matter what position the wheel is turned in. Also, I can push, tap, press hard, pound, etc. on any other location on the airbag horn, and no other location other than that one red spot area will sound the horn.
     
  7. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    All will likely become self-evident as soon as the airbag is removed for a look-see behind it.

    The airbag itself doesn't really know or care that you use it as the horn switch. You're just pushing the whole thing (or one or another corner of it) back into the wheel, and the horn contacts are behind it.
     
  8. bighouse

    bighouse Active Member

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    I'll have to find a diagram or youtube that shows how to remove the airbag so I can check it out sometime.
     
  9. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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  10. bighouse

    bighouse Active Member

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    This looks pretty easy to do, actually!
     
  11. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The video's not bad. For your own purposes, you're not likely to need any more of it than the part for getting the airbag off.

    The 12 volt battery is disconnected as soon as either terminal is. No need to do both. No need to fuss with the orange traction battery plug at all. You're not going to be doing any high-voltage system work here. A quicker way to disconnect the 12 volt battery is just to unplug the fat white cable in the underhood fuse box. (In my car, that would leave some of my added toys still powered that are connected right back at the battery. But it depowers all the stuff that came with the car, which is what matters here.)

    The more willing you are to work on those plastic cover panels without metal picks and such, the fewer unsightly gouges and scratches they'll have when you're done.

    Once he has the airbag out, he puts it out of the way in the back seat, off camera. That makes this a good place for an open-book safety quiz: whenever you set down an airbag, you set it down which way up?

    Once you've done that, you should have no problem seeing what's up with the horn contacts. The horn beeps when that blue wire attached to the airbag gets grounded (to the metal frame of the steering wheel itself, mounted solidly on the steering shaft). The structure that the airbag pops into is normally insulated from the grounded parts, except when you are pushing on it, and you should be able to find the contacts that touch when you do that.



    Only for future readers who would want to follow that video further, say to replace the spiral cable:

    Mating marks are good for the wheel and the steering shaft. A mating mark on the nut won't necessarily tell you when it's properly retightened; a torque wrench is better. Toyota does not specify Loctite for the nut, as long as it's correctly torqued.

    Avoid pulling a lock pin from a new spiral cable before the spiral cable is installed on the properly-centered steering shaft with the wheels straight ahead. If you're transferring over the steering angle sensor from an old cable like the guy in the video, and you have his problem with the sensor tabs not lining up with the spiral cable notches, don't forget the sensor also can be turned. ;) (You don't run into that problem if you buy a Toyota spiral cable, which comes with the sensor already.)
     
  12. Seymour1

    Seymour1 Junior Member

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    Just a thought:
    The horn on my 2007 Corolla acted the same way. The horn "ring" makes contact with a berillium copper clip which snaps around aluminum protrusions which are grounded and part of the steering wheel casting. The aluminum was oxidized and preventing a good ground connection on the clips. As I recall, there were 3 of the clips and only one would work. I soldered wires to each berillium clip and used ring terminals under a screw on the wires for a good ground connection.
     
  13. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Yes or you could just change the steering wheel ones from a lot of Toyotas will fit a lot of other Toyotas buttons and all doesn't matter steering wheel still works used to be there was a little pin that stuck out of the combination switch that would ride on the ring on the back of the steering wheel I'm sure that's changed somewhat now and it's done a little differently whether you repair and solder more stuff on the business or change the steering wheel or what have you there's a bunch of ways to skin that cat so shouldn't be too problematic.