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Attention Prius Owners, I believe I have discovered a previously unknown Mechanism of Low MPG.

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by TheLastMojojomo, Nov 2, 2021.

  1. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    I get 47 in my Gen 2 my 2013 persona has never seen 53 mi to the gallon No sir I may not have to be driving like a real twat waffle to even get close to that not possible unless of course you know you got lines of traffic behind you You're going downhill for 40 mi I can't imagine the 1.8 l engine but I read about people doing it all the time no issue there's nothing wrong with my car that's for sure no brakes are dragging nothing's happening brakes dragging where on a Prius not at the wheels you mean the electric MG1 and two are dragging they have clearances they're electric motors they don't get to dragging until the voltage does its thing backwards or whatever. So what exactly are you loosening before we'll discs on the Gen 3 I don't think so The Gen 3 will roll down a hill so fast it'll get you in an accident there's nothing dragging on a Gen 3 as a matter of fact it looks like it's made to roll as fast as possible. The Gen 2 will not do this like the Gen 3 The Gen 3 will be flying down a hill before you know it on a on a low grade too it'll get away from me if you're not careful All of a sudden you'll look down and be doing 80 mph The Gen 2 will not do this like that.
     
  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    53? easypeasy, but one must understand how one drives. it's difficult to be objective about oneself
     
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  3. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Like I say in the heat in North Carolina driving normally getting like maybe going downhill or something I don't know we haven't reached it yet there's certainly nothing dragging that is the least of our issues pretty much a new engine and everything seems spot-on now granted I don't have a lot of time usually to go through a whole tank of gas driving for extreme gas mileage usually we've got places to go deadlines to meet something where we're not going to be able to try to keep the vacuum gauge pegged and they're in probably lies the problem but I'm very happy with 4748 no problem
     
  4. Plaman

    Plaman Member

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    How close are you guys monitoring HV battery temps? I am learning this could also be the cause of "throttled" performance.
     
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  5. Toyota2

    Toyota2 Junior Member

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    Im think i've joined a big bang theory forum .
    I drive slow , always lift off gas to keep at edge of propulsion of desired speed to coasting
     
  6. Toyota2

    Toyota2 Junior Member

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  7. JahT

    JahT Member

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    OK I think I understand the Weak EV thing you are describing finally @TheLastMojojomo. I think I will try pulling 12V power and then go drive the freeway for 15-20 minutes over several days. And if that doesn't work then I'd just pull power again and try again. I can modify my driving and A/C use and keep the SOC of the HV battery high enough that I don't experience the "ICE only" feeling of ALL REV AND NO GO. But I never had to think about it before, and after I preventively changed the 12V battery because it was 8 years old, I did.

    My other post:
    mpg average stuck at 41.x after new 12V battery | PriusChat
     
  8. TheLastMojojomo

    TheLastMojojomo Active Member

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    I know the post is alot to take in and very schizoy... you do not want to disconnect the 12v Battery. Disconnecting the 12v Battery is what causes the WEAK EV State... you want to avoid disconnecting the 12v at all costs.

    The commuting however may activate the MAX EV State. But it is more complicated than just driving. To trigger the parameter that activates the MAX EV State likely requires multiple other factors besides highway driving... like the HV Batt needs to be between 77-104°F for multiple drive cycles in a row and potentially measuring a certain level of Internal Resistance from the Hybrid Battery as well.

    I believe the parameter that triggers the MAX EV State is similar to a Drive Cycle Parameter. The Prius needs to meet certain parameters for multiple drive cycles in a row for the Hybrid Control ECU to engage the MAX EV State. Once the parameters are verified it engages the MAX EV State and stays this way until another 12v disconnect or ECU reset.

    I'm making a video on this presently after trying everything over the summer to get my Prius to re-engage the MAX EV State including installing a Project Lithium Battery... I've been stuck in the WEAK EV State for 3 years and 50,000 miles now.

    I will explain the MAX and WEAK EV States as best as I can in short concise video form and it will all become much more clear. I technically can't prove them yet as I can't directly show the different behaviors between the MAX and WEAK EV States... but there is plenty of evidence from other posters that point to their existence.

    Here is a preliminary test video I made earlier this year to showcase the WEAK EV State:


    This video shows the WEAK EV State only. It shows the relationship between Pedal Angle, HV BATTERY SOC, and when the engine kicks on.

    For the MAX EV State Pedal Angles would be much higher before the engine kicks on at the same SOC's as the WEAK EV State video above. But I can't show that for comparison because I haven't been able to record data for the MAX EV State.

    This was just an initial test video. I will have much more info in the final version and have a well written narrative that makes a good argument for the existence of the MAX and WEAK EV States. This may be laying the ground work for a massive lawsuit against Toyota but that is not my intent.

    I am working on the final video now as we speak:

    [​IMG]
    [​IMG]

    Also user @Darklandscape just to keep you updated.​
     
    #48 TheLastMojojomo, Nov 16, 2022
    Last edited: Nov 16, 2022
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  9. JahT

    JahT Member

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    Well I didn't disconnect the battery. But I did just go away for 10 days and my new 12V OEM battery died. I don't know if it kept enough power for the ECU memory or whatever, but the radio stations reset. Not sure what the drain was, I'll have to search for causes here.

    I see in you video how it starts off with a 60%+ SOC and less ICE running, but later in the video it goes down to 40% SOC and more ICE running. It was hard to see how the MFD was displaying bars during that time. Dr. Prius says I have like 50% capacity, so in my experience the low EV state is just my damaged old battery and the ICE just never charges up the HV battery to 80% and depending on the driving conditions and style you might get more discharge or more regen to keep it above that threshold for "low EV state."
     
  10. douglasjre

    douglasjre Senior Member

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    Max Regen is limited by batt temp. Highway driving doesn't rely on battery so it cools down the batt. City driving warms it and u get less Regen after a bit of hard city use. That's all that's going on man
     
  11. TheLastMojojomo

    TheLastMojojomo Active Member

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    In the video I force charged my HV Battery to 80% by putting my foot on both the gas and brake simultaneously while in Drive. This is when my OEM Ni-Mh HV Battery read at 60% capacity according to Dr. PRIUS.

    If the HV Battery is above 104°F... the Prius will not let you charge the HV Battery to 80% as it begins to throttle maximum charge allowed in after that point.

    As long as your Prius HV Battery is below 104°F... you definitely can charge it to 80٪ SOC. It doesn't matter that your Battery capacity reads 50% in Dr. Prius. Your Battery is still able to attain the 80% SOC which is measured by voltage reading not charge capacity. The only thing the capacity test does is measure how long the HV Battery takes to discharge from 70% to 40%. Not whether it can attain an 80% SOC or not.

    Fundamentally your not understanding what I'm attempting to explain with the EV States... and I don't blame you... My initial Post above is very Schizoy and somewhat incoherent. The video I'm making and 2nd post will be much more coherent.

    I will try to explain simply what I mean by MAX and WEAK EV State.

    Let's say your Gen 2 Prius has 6 State of Charge Bars on the MFD Display:

    [​IMG]

    For a
    MAX EV State Prius, Gas Pedal Angles allowed for EV Mode will be much higher at 6 Bars SOC... around 60%+ of full throttle... resulting in much more EV power and acceleration in EV Mode and the the ICE Spinning up much later in normal city driving... allowing the Prius to get the 48 EPA estimated City MPG's.

    For a WEAK EV State Prius, Gas Pedal Angles allowed for EV Mode will be significantly reduced at the same 6 bars SOC... around 30% of full throttle... resulting in much less EV Power and acceleration and the ICE Spinning up earlier and more frequently in City Traffic reducing city mpg's from the 48 EPA Estimated Mpg's to 35-40 MPG.

    This EV State Parameter is dictated by what I believe is the Hybrid Control ECU in the Prius. The Hybrid Control ECU is reverted to the WEAK EV State after every 12V disconnect or ECU reset.

    To get the Prius Hybrid Control ECU to revert back to the MAX EV State... a drive cycle style parameter needs to be undergone... similar to an emissions monitor.. but for the Hybrid System instead. If all the parameters are met for say 3 drive cycles in a row, the MAX EV State will trigger permanently until another 12v disconnect.

    But Toyota has not disclosed what this parameter is, why it happens, or the engineering reason behind it. And it appears to be rather stringent... I believe right now there are 100,000's of Toyota Priuses/Hybrids on the road affected by this causing chronically low city mpg's.

    My Personal Gen 2 Prius use to get 45ish mpg on my 106 mile 400 mailbox mail route I did everyday.

    Then after a 12v disconnect, for the exact same mail route driven the exact same way everyday... my Prius now gets 35ish mpg and never more... due to being reverted to the WEAK EV State. My Prius has now been stuck this way for 3 years and 50,000+ miles.

    EV Mode is much less aggressive than it use to be... and it happend directly after the 12v disconnect... and if you read the My Low MPG Story section of the original schizo post... my Prius has reverted between the
    MAX and WEAK EV States multiple times.

    I have found 6+ posts from others that describe this phenomenon in coherent detail... and dozens more that I believe are attempting to describe this same WEAK EV State LOW Mpg phenomenon... the posters just don't have coherent knowledge of how Priuses/vehicles work in general to describe what is happening... all of this will be gone over in my final video/post.

    For now... here are some photos for the final video/post I'm working on.

    The screenshots below show the Maximum
    Pedal Angles allowed before the ICE kicks on in relation to HV Battery SOC for my WEAK EV State Gen 2 Prius:

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]

    You can see how the Pedal Angles before ICE Activation corellate directly with HV Battery SOC.

    If this were a
    MAX EV State Gen 2 Prius, Pedal Angles would be around DOUBLE before ICE activation occurs...

    Also note, the response curve for
    Pedal Angle/EV Mode changes between 0-15mph... resulting in a higher EV Mode Output and Pedal Angle for slow speeds in relation to HV Battery SOC.
     
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  12. qmanqman

    qmanqman Active Member

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    What is considered low mpg? Right now my daughter's screen says 38.2 mpg.
     
  13. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk EGR Fanatic

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    It depends a LOT on usage. For an example, frequently sitting in a parking lot idling for 10~20 minutes, your mpg is going to tank. Is she pretty diligent, or?
     
  14. qmanqman

    qmanqman Active Member

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    I know she doesn't sit idling for any reason. She has two work locations in town about 5 miles apart and drives between the two during the week. The closest of those to the house is 2 miles.

    I'm just wondering what is considered normal mpg. fueleconomy.gov says 46 but they don't always get it right. Is 45 about average for y'all?
     
  15. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    I think the Gen 3 is actually allowed from 37 to 51 or something like that so wonder massive some sort of conditions it could get as low as 37 mpg and I guess not be broken. I read that in some literature and I've seen others quote it also do I know if it's right absolutely not. The Gen 2 doesn't get a mileage range like that I don't think and it's literature but I'm also not positive.
     
  16. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    For that kind of driving pattern, 37 MPG is totally reasonable, it is still not good but totally reasonable.
     
  17. qmanqman

    qmanqman Active Member

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    Checked the spark plugs and they were toast. That little disk on the ground electrode was gone and the ground electrode itself had burnt partway off. The odd thing is plugs are always replacement item #1. Not sure why I never did it on this car. This may not fix it but it should have an effect.
     
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  18. Darren Hernandez

    Darren Hernandez New Member

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    Yes I believe you are correct as well as I just came across some other class action lawsuits with Gen 3s but I have a Gen 2 and it literally has a mind of its own where one night I had to do a 268 MI round trip somewhere and that night after only having it for maybe 2 months got at least 50 miles per gallon but now every other day best I can get is apparently around 30 but who knows if that's even right
     
  19. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    you need to measure it at the pump
     
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  20. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    Very typical of counterfeit plugs.