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2007 Hybrid Battery Not Discharging Like Normal

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Technical Discussion' started by 24gzerancr, Dec 14, 2023.

  1. 24gzerancr

    24gzerancr Junior Member

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    Two
    I have recently noticed a drop of about 10-15mpg since summer (I live in PA). I thought it was all due to temperature and fuel changes. I drive my car daily to work and school, and it currently has 156k. This morning I noticed that the hybrid battery level was green for my entire drive home, and the screen showed it discharging for only a split second when given power before it would switch to just the ICE. It would run off the battery consistently in low power situations (slowly coasting, heating the car in park), but once I gave it more gas the battery would not output power. However, both the motor and engine would be shown giving power to the wheels. This confused me because I thought that the only way for the electric motor to be driven to power the wheels was through the hybrid battery. Also concerning, the battery level was hardly ever a couple bars below full. While driving it around it was actually fully charged up a number of times which is very rare on my daily commute. Does this sound like a failing hybrid battery?

    Edit: I drove home today and monitored the battery with Dr Prius. The highest I saw for voltage difference was 0.2x. The battery also showed that it was discharging normally, but it was still at a relatively high charge and would continue to charge even when it was close to full which it had not done before. What seemed super odd to me is that from the time I turned the car on to the time I turned it off, the ICE seemed to be constantly running. I can’t be too sure about this while I was driving because it’s hard to decipher the noise, but while parked the ICE was constantly running without being displayed on the screen, and with the battery at full charge and heat off. I just turned the car on again, parked and without any heat or lights and the ICE was not on for about 5 seconds. Then it kicked on and showed power going to charge the hybrid battery, which had only one bar less than full charge. I have only ever seen the ICE kick on to charge the battery while parked if it was only a couple bars full. Is this a more likely an ECU issue? Or possibly just normal operation? I know that one of the two hybrid ecu’s is malfunctioning because I was dealing with a battery fan code in the summer.
     
    #1 24gzerancr, Dec 14, 2023
    Last edited: Dec 14, 2023
  2. TMR-JWAP

    TMR-JWAP Senior Member

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    Were you low on fuel? I've recently been goofing around a bit to see how far I can drive when only having 1 dot on the fuel gauge, and even a flashing dot. Furthest I've gone so far was 42 miles after it started flashing. Then I chickened out and fueled up! Something I've noticed is that the HV battery seems to be kept at in the higher green SOC when driving at those fuel levels, almost like the car is trying to help you by having a (almost) fully charged battery in case you're crazy enough to run it out of fuel. Anyone else picked up on this or am I imagining it?
     
    24gzerancr likes this.
  3. 24gzerancr

    24gzerancr Junior Member

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    I am in fact low on fuel. Not terribly low, but around two bars going on one. It has been seeming like these last two bars are taking quite a long time to dissipate, so perhaps I am lower than I think and there is some sort of fuel gauge issue, which I have heard of but never had issues with myself. I’ll fill up tomorrow and see what difference I get. On another note, does my drop in mpg seem bad? It is close to 25% loss of efficiency. Granted, I have been doing more rural driving than highway which was not the case in the summer. This could be part of the cause.
     
  4. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    no trouble codes?
     
  5. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    What I have noticed in this '08 car that I bought out of Raleigh It's fuel gauge seems to be very wild I drive this car 355 mi and I'm down to one dot very close to flashing but when I pull into sheets and gas up I meet her in 8.8 gallons of fuel and can't put any more in it is full so I'm basically got one point some odd gallons still in the tank because if we hold 11.1 so two in some odd gallons are still in the tank when I'm being told I'm getting right at the flashing dot and that's not good in my other cars I don't think it's like this so I could run to 500 and I can't imagine the flashing would have been going on for 2 hours or something like that I need to try it and see what happens because the last two or three tanks I zero everything at every fill up. And then I've run 355 to 370 at the 370 on flashing at the 3:55 the flashing has not started yet and I put in like I say about 8.4 gallons 8.8 gallons and cannot fit anymore.
     
  6. Carall

    Carall Member

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    Your battery may have lost capacity. You can find that out by performing a test in the morning.

    When you park your car before going home:
    With the car running, press the the emergency brake, then press the brake pedal with your left foot. Put the gear stick to drive and step on the gas pedal until the engine begins to charge the battery pack. Don't step on the gas too hard, just enough for it to start charging. As soon as the charging reaches the first green bar (7 green bars), release the gas pedal and switch to parking. Turn off your car and you can go home.

    In the morning.
    With your foot on the brake pedal, press the start button. As soon as the “ready” light comes on, start driving (without letting the ICE charge the battery pack) for about a mile, with all power consumptions turned off, not rolling, not braking hard and not stopping, but trying to accelerate slightly. MFD will update the charge bars within one minute. If your battery has little capacity left or at least one module is very weak, then the charge bars will begin to disappear one after another. The fewer of them left, the less capacity left in the whole battery pack, or in one or more modules.
     
  7. 24gzerancr

    24gzerancr Junior Member

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    This sounds a little complicated but I’ll definitely give it a shot once I have time. When you say turn the car off and you can go home, do you mean turn it off and back on before heading home, or turn it off once I get home? And is this stuff all done as one test, or are they separate from each other?
     
  8. 24gzerancr

    24gzerancr Junior Member

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    Two
    Just checked. I have a p3000 code. I’m thinking about taking it to Toyota to get the subcode. Still getting over 40 mpgs so is a failing battery even likely?

    Edit: I actually remembered this code is from the malfunctioning ECU which will sparatically cut of power to the fan, but still operates fine. It only comes on when weather is around at least 50 degrees and I am driving for a while. Don’t think it has anything to do with the battery itself.
     
    #8 24gzerancr, Dec 15, 2023
    Last edited: Dec 15, 2023
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  9. Carall

    Carall Member

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    When the battery is charged to the level i wrote in the post, you just turn off your car and let it sit till the morning.
     
  10. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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