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Battery fan

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Technical Discussion' started by PGEschauzier, Feb 25, 2008.

  1. PGEschauzier

    PGEschauzier New Member

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    I've had my Prius since July 2006 and today, for the first time, I heard a fan noise coming from the rear passenger seat battery vent. I stopped the car and felt air being dispelled through the vent and what appeared to be a fan noise. After about 5 minutes, the noise stopped. Anyone have any answers on this?
     
  2. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    Yes, your HV battery was warm. That's how it works.

    Tom
     
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  3. JimN

    JimN Let the games begin!

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    Where do live and how do you drive that you managed to get the fan to start? Half my grill is blocked all year and even "fully" blocked at 70F it hasn't turned on.
     
  4. David Beale

    David Beale Senior Member

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    Ahh, Jim, blocking the grill will have no effect on the battery fan use.

    The battery fan will run if you heat up the battery, from EV use, for example (whether switch induced or not). Or from charging a discharged battery with the ICE.


    If you've never heard it before, but just noticed it, that's for sure normal. When I first got my car I didn't notice much of the car's operation. After awhile you get "tuned in" to the sounds you never heard before. ;)
     
  5. richard schumacher

    richard schumacher shortbus driver

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    Make certain that you never block or cover the battery vent.
     
  6. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Driving in mountains is a good way to make the HV battery warm enough for fan-on. It moves lots of energy in and out of the battery; both processes generate heat.
     
  7. seasalsa

    seasalsa Active Member

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    One of the most common reasons for the battery fan to operate is driving in hot weather with the windows open and no AC. You have to remember that the battery is cooled by inside air and the warmer it is, the more the fan will run. Keeping the battery comfortable will actually improve your mileage.
     
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  8. Bear68

    Bear68 Member

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    If the noise seems a bit louder than normal, you might want to take a look inside the fan housing. I recently saw a Prius with a strange rattling noise from the HV fan. Turns out a frog had gotten inside and was causing a noise when the fan would come on.
     
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  9. donee

    donee New Member

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    Hi PGE...,

    Are you sure the air was coming from the vent, and not being sucked into the vent ? If it was coming from vent (correct me if I am wrong Bear) that seems to indicate a blockage of the exhaust duct. The exhaust duct blowes out the passenger side wheel well. A blocked duct and a operating blower (fan) would make more noise than an open duct and an operating blower.
     
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  10. Bear68

    Bear68 Member

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    You are not wrong Dontee... I agree with your thoughts... A blocked exhaust could also cause excessive noise...
     
  11. N3FOL

    N3FOL Member

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    Glad to come across this thread. I was not aware at all that there is a fan back in the HV battery. ;)
     
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  12. devayogi@sbcglobal.net

    [email protected] New Member

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    Hello
    I have a 2006 prius with an undioagnosed pop sound which comes from the rear (leftREAR) of the car
    It is so intermittent I cannot duplicate the problem but it is there
    What would the fan noise sound like?
    Thanks
    Deva
    PS toyota service could not isolate or fix the problem even thos they had the car for 8 days
     
  13. richard schumacher

    richard schumacher shortbus driver

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    The fan will give a whirring sound of at least a few seconds duration, not a single or repeated "pop". By the way, is your "pop" single or repeating? Is there possibly something rolling around in the trunk?
     
  14. donee

    donee New Member

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    Hi Deva...,

    The pop sound might be the brakes at when you use the brakes below 7 mph. Above 7 mph the braking is electric, and thru the front wheels only. Below, the car switches to friction brakes, and there is a hydraulic pressure resouvoir (called an accumulator). It has allot of pressure just sitting. If there is any hangup in a drum (rear brake) mechanism, it will catch and then get pushed through, making the pop. Drum brakes are like this in my experience. They have a loose fit, and the shoes are not solidly guided. So, they can rub against the inside of the drum, and catch at times.
     
  15. darthweber

    darthweber New Member

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    I had this exact thing happen today. I have a 2007 prius and have never heard this sound. it was realy loud and was drawing air, not blowing. Is there a filter?
     
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  16. rokibler

    rokibler Member

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    This answers a question I had about regen braking. So all the braking power is provided by the front wheels above 7 mph? (Assuming gentle driving and no emergency) That's cool.
     
  17. V8Cobrakid

    V8Cobrakid Green Handyman

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    "All" is too loose of a term.. only x amount of energy can be reneged through the front wheels at any time. turning that figure into pedal pressure brings you somewhere between 15 and 20 percent.. last time i read about it ( on here with all these gurus ) the numbers were all over the place.. and this only applies to the GEN II.... this gen III may be two to three times more efficient... so.. any non panic stop under 50% brake pressure? shrug...

    btw, the easiest way to turn that fan on is go up a really long hill right after a cold start. since the electric side does most of the assisting during warm up, the batteries usually call to get cooled.

    as for the "air going in or coming out" ... it's a fan.. it blows in 1 direction. you shouldn't get a breeze if it's blocked.. it should simply stay on longer since it's not doing it's job.
     
  18. richard schumacher

    richard schumacher shortbus driver

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    Only the cabin air filter. It's a good idea to use recirc most of the time to keep the dust down.

    If the fan starts running a lot, see a dealer. Every now and then is just happenstance, the battery system being warmer than it wants to be.
     
  19. brick

    brick Active Member

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    I think it catches everyone off guard the first time it happens. I have only heard it once, and it required driving around town for half the day then driving down and back up a really large hill that I don't normally take. Sure enough the ScanGauge was reading a battery temp well above 50C whereas I rarely see it much above 45C during normal driving. At least I know the fan works! For a while I was starting to wonder.
     
  20. pm8675309

    pm8675309 New Member

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    I have a 2007 Prius III 60,000 miles. I live in PHX. I have only heard the fan come on three times (Never in Summer). The weird thing for me is that when the fan is on, its screws with the performance of the vehicle. The throttle response is terrible. It doesn't rev-down on deceleration, rather stays at higher RPM like its in "B" mode. Does this sound bad? Should I trade it in?