OEM 3 way coolant valve 16670-21010?

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by FreydNot, Jan 25, 2025 at 8:57 PM.

  1. FreydNot

    FreydNot Member

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    There are lots of thread about replacing the 3 way coolant valve, but none of them mention OEM vs Genuine Toyota parts. I'm fining 16670-21010 at various online Toyota dealers for around $110 plus tax and shipping. Rock auto has the Toyota part at $127, but they have other options starting at $61 (Dorman) and up.

    Is this a case where I shouldn't try to save $60 and just pay for the genuine Toyota part?
     
  2. mr_guy_mann

    mr_guy_mann Senior Member

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    Experience has shown that the Toyota part is the most reliable. Just get it from a reputable source (like a dealer or rockauto, not ebay or amazon)

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  3. MAX2

    MAX2 Member

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    There is nothing to break in a three-way valve for a thermos system. The cause of all the troubles is the wear of the tracks in the potentiometer, which transmits its data to the ECM when the valve is turned to a certain angle.
    RVQ121 12V 502 5K Ceramic potentiometer strip PPS-GF40 360 rpm
    If you can find such a potentiometer and replace it, your three-way valve will last longer than the car.
    The potentiometer costs about $7-$8

    [​IMG]

     
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  4. FreydNot

    FreydNot Member

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    I totally see where you are going with that. Looks like a basic trimpot of sorts. Heck I could probably spray some old skool tuner cleaner into it, move it back and forth a bit and get it to work again. But I'd have to remove it from the car and get access to the pot.

    How confident are you that the photo you attached (that I can only see when I quoted your message) is the exact part needed? Have you actually had your eyes on one? Got any photos of the inside of the three way valve assembly?
     
  5. MAX2

    MAX2 Member

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    Of course, the three-way valve must be removed to gain access to the potentiometer.
    The potentiometer is located under a cover that is secured with 5 screws.
    View of the potentiometer with the cover removed.

    [​IMG]
     
  6. FreydNot

    FreydNot Member

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    Oh, that's a great photo. I'll give replacing the pot serious consideration. My only worry is how to calibrate the position of the pot when it gets installed, but that could probably get worked out.
     
  7. MAX2

    MAX2 Member

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  8. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Hmmmmmm so I could make this switchable by switch or such interesting . I have one open already which looks very nice inside don't seem stuck or fouled .
     
  9. MAX2

    MAX2 Member

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    Mechanical jamming is unlikely unless a piece of rubber hose gets into the tap. The three-way tap drive motor works very rarely, the operation lasts for a minute, and therefore, by replacing the potentiometer, you will breathe new life into the old three-way tap.