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Hybrid Battery Survey-Gen2 Prius 2004-2009

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by wjtracy, Sep 18, 2013.

?
  1. Failed below 100,000 miles

    6 vote(s)
    4.8%
  2. Failed between 100,000 and 150,000 miles

    8 vote(s)
    6.3%
  3. Failed between 150,000 and 200,000 miles

    5 vote(s)
    4.0%
  4. Failed at over 200,000 miles

    1 vote(s)
    0.8%
  5. Has not failed below 100,000 miles

    42 vote(s)
    33.3%
  6. Has not failed between 100,000 and 150,000 miles

    37 vote(s)
    29.4%
  7. Has not failed between 150,000 and 200,000 miles

    19 vote(s)
    15.1%
  8. Has not failed at over 200,000 miles

    8 vote(s)
    6.3%
  1. GasperG

    GasperG Senior Member

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    Electricity use in Ready mode can vary, with lights on, fan on , radio on, it can be as high as 400 W. Add rear defrost, front defrost, or AC and you have even more.

    The test is interesting, you could speed it up with additional constant (not variable like AC) electric drain and monitor battery discharge current and SOC in % on OBD port.

    From full to empty usually means from 60% to 40% SOC, this is just 0.26 kWh, from all full bars (80%) to 2 bars (40%) would be 0.52 kWh.

    In cold weather engine will start sooner, but you can partly avoid that with fan off button. Coolant can then drop bellow 40° C without starting up the engine, but I don't really know how low it will go before starting up again.
     
  2. giora

    giora Senior Member

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    The test sounds good in my weather all year round except mid winter. I will recommend it to a friend with a Gen2. Can do it with headlights on and from 6 bars to engine triggering and monitor in time.
    Could also be good for first impression for a potential buyer of used car if the weather is right.
     
  3. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    I don't believe you are suppose to turn on all accessories, headlight and AC to do this simple test. As a car gets older, the battery will naturally be weaker and won't show performance numbers the same as new. As I was told, if the battery can maintain a charge on "ready" mode for 30 minutes without any accessories on, just gives you an idea the battery is good and doesn't have any bad/too weak of cells. I don't think you should make it too scientific as it probably would not measure up correctly
     
  4. Sarge

    Sarge Senior Member

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    Well, if that is the case, then I guess I buck the trend. :-/

    I have a 2006 Canadian model Prius which was purchased as a demo car in April 2006 (~4K miles), and my HV battery failed in May 2013, at about 170K miles (both converted from KM, of course). The good news is that true to form, the car never stranded me, and reverts to "turtle mode" to still get my from point A to point B until I figured out what to do about it.

    As far as driving pattern, I am fairly heavy, driving virtually every day, average 70-100 miles daily in the city (long commute, work on the road...), and Canadian summer and winters. Not many short trips, regular use, and somewhat high/low temperatures in the peak of the seasons, but not so much that I feel that would lead to premature failure.

    With regards to repairs, I shopped three different Toyota dealers who all quoted me a full battery pack replacement in the $3K neighbourhood as the only option (they claimed Toyota did not have a part number for individual cells).

    Anyway, to make a long story short, I located a "Prius rebuilder" north of Toronto (Autodex in Concord, ON) who makes a business of savaging wrecked Prius and selling them (full disclosure, of course), and very reputable guy. I found him through reinvolt.com. Anyway, he was able to rebuild my battery for me, along with a 1-year warranty, for considerably less than half of the price Toyota wanted. 7 months later, so far so good. :) If anyone near Southern Ontario wants his info, let me know.
     
    Hanging on with 286k likes this.
  5. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    208,000km (~130,000 miles) on the original HV battery. Our warranty is the standard 8 years/160,000km (100,000 mile) warranty for the battery. It's still going. Bought new in Oct 2004.
     
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  6. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    You're just 10k km ahead of me Tideland, though I'm probably catching you as I'm doing about 30,000+ km pr year these days.

    Like yourself I'm also out of warranty, at 198000 km now but still going well. Personally I'll consider it a success if I make 241,000 km (150,000 miles), as that's currently my benchmark for getting a decent run out of the original battery. Seeing as that's going to take under 18 months, I'm pretty confident of making it to 150k miles. :)
     
  7. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    You'll definitely surpass us. We're doing about 20,000km a year on the Prius now and we'll see how long it'll last but it's getting to the time that we're thinking of replacing it.
     
  8. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    SUMMARY and CONCLUSIONS
    It's time to sum up this Gen2 hybrid batt survey. The survey results are more useful than I first thought, when combined with Consumer Reports 2014 Auto Issue new data on Prius batteries.
    • 126 responders
    • 20 replaced batteries (18.9%)
    • 14 of 20 replaced under 150,000 miles (70%) most of these probably under warranty
    • Next survey we should ask how many of the replacements were under warranty
    As luck would have it, Consumer Reports gave some new data on Prii battery replacements. I have summarized this data below, along with my own data on number of USA Prii sold per year
    • CR survey shows about 2% of Gen2 batteries replaced
    • Therefore (as expected) our PriusChat survey (18.9%) was skewed towards those having issues
    • CR survey seems to show 2006 model year a little worse Gen2 (which was a question I had)
    • CR survey confirms Toyota statement that <1% of Prius all batteries replaced to date!!!
    • Data in RED is estimated (by me)
    Prius Batt Repl.jpg
     
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  9. Deidram

    Deidram Junior Member

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    Just thought I'd add my info to your query: 2005 Prius, 257,000 km. No issues with the hybrid battery or the 12 volt either for that matter so far. I live in the Pacific Northwest and average 600-700 km/week.
     
    Hanging on with 286k likes this.
  10. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    In your next survey also ask about climate (hot, warm, moderate, cold - heat is the enemy) and terrain (flat, hills, mountains - Mountains cause stress on the HV battery) as these are major factors determining HV battery life.

    JeffD
     
  11. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    Do you know the one thing which would have the greatest impact on the reliability of the data. This question

    * Did you come to these forums specifically because you were having traction battery problems, or problems that ultimately turned out to be due to a failing traction battery.*

    Keep those people in a separate category and then we might have some meaningful data. :)
     
  12. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    Ok, we understand the reasons why our data could be skewed, but what exactly do we know about the consumer reports data?

    Does anyone have any information on exactly how the consumer reports data was collected, just to be sure that it isn't also skewed. I mean, they didn't just ask Toyota how many batteries they've replaced did they?
     
  13. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    Also many of the batteries replaced are not warranty replacements. There are many that install Dorman batteries and other remanufactured options. Not sure those are part of the survey 2% figure.
     
  14. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    Yep, that was exactly the point I was trying to make JC.(y) Without knowing exactly how the CR figures were obtained, how do we know that it's not just some limited subset. Who knows, it might only represent out of warranty replacements at dealer service departments or something very limited like that.

    The other thing that sits uneasy with me about those really low numbers, like 1 to 2 percent total, is that more than that many probably get written off every year (not total like the CR battery replacement figures, but EVERY year). So why the heck are battery rebuilders struggling to find salvageable batteries? Why are salvage batteries being snapped up as quickly as they become available. Why is supply and demand forcing the price of salvage batteries ever higher? They should be piling high to the roof in junk yards if those are the true TOTAL figures!
     
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  15. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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    Consumer reports reliability data comes directly from vehicle owners through a survey sent out every year. It has nothing to do with manufacturer reporting, warranty status etc.

    I believe salvageable batteries are still fairly hard to find as all those that go to Toyota are supposed to be recycled rather than ending up in a junk yard. My understanding is that Toyota is still offering a $200 "bounty" on old battery packs to encourage recycling, so even those that end up at junkyards by other means have a good chance of finding their way back to Toyota.

    Rob
     
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  16. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    Thanks for the info Rob. That gives me a bit more confidence in their data now. :)
     
  17. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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  18. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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    CR claims the survey dataset tends to track very well with total sales volumes by year / model. Assuming that's true, we could do a very rough estimate of the sample size by estimating that the 1.1 million responses represents an equal sampling (~0.45%) of the ~246 million vehicles in the US "fleet." Applying that to the sales data above:

    Year: Estimated Sample Size
    2002: 90
    2003: 110
    2004: 241
    2005: 482
    2006: 478
    2007: 810
    2008: 709
    2009:624
    2010: 630
    2011: 610
    2012: 1058
    2013: 1047
    Total Sample: 6,889

    Right off the bat the older models are probably exaggerated slightly, as I haven't made any effort to correct for the number of cars going out of service each year. I doubt its worth trying to do so, as this is a pretty rough estimate anyway. It should be sufficient to give a reasonable idea of the order of magnitude of the sample set.

    Rob
     
  19. miscrms

    miscrms Plug Envious Member

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    You could also combine the two and come up with an estimated number of reported failures:

    Year: Estimated Failures / Responses
    2002: 4/90
    2003: 4/110
    2004: 2/241
    2005: 10/482
    2006: 14/478
    2007: 8/810
    2008: 4/709
    2009: 2/624
    2010: 1/630
    2011: 1/610
    2012: 1/1058
    2013: 1/1047
    Total Sample: 52/6,889
    Again this is a very rough estimate based on certain assumptions about the data set as above.
     
  20. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    Thanks again Rob.

    Based on those numbers then the overall results should at least give us a good indication, but I'd like to warn that the numbers (and amount of variation) for individual year models are too small to make conclusions like, "2006 are less reliable than 2005", as it appears some people have been tempted to do.

    For example, based on your numbers I just did a quick statistical comparison (Chi-squared) and it showed that there is definitely no statistical difference between 2005 and 2006 models. :)
     
    miscrms likes this.