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Low Coolant light is on, Please help out.

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Technical Discussion' started by fortysixandtwo, Aug 24, 2006.

  1. fortysixandtwo

    fortysixandtwo New Member

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    hello Everyone,
    I just got a Prius and I was just wondering if it is normal to have the coolant light be on. Its the blue light and it means its low. I read the manuel and it says the light comes on when the temperature is low. I just wanted to know if it is safe to drive with the light on. If I drive it a few minutes it will turn off. Or should I just let the Prius warm up a little bit. Please respond! Thanks for your time.
     
  2. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Umm, I don't think it means LOW. It means COLD. The Classic Prius (well, the new one too) doesn't have an engine coolant gauge so, similar to the new Yaris, it has a blue coolant light to tell you that the engine is still cold.
     
  3. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Tideland has got you covered. That blue light will always come on at startup unless your coolant is above about 70 oC. When winter comes, it will stay on a bit longer. There is also a red/orange light with the same design that would come on if the coolant temp got too high. I don't know of anyone seeing that light while driving.

    To check your engine coolant level, confirm that the big white plastic reservoir on the passenger side of the engine compartment is about half full of red/pink stuff.
     
  4. vincent1449p

    vincent1449p Active Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(fortysixandtwo @ Aug 25 2006, 08:47 AM) [snapback]309102[/snapback]</div>
    Yes, it is normal and safe to drive with the Low Coolant Temperature Indicator Light on, not necessary to leave the engine idling to warm up.

    Unless the light doesn't turn off at below conditions:

    1) When the engine starts, the coolant temp. is between -7ºC (20ºF) and 10ºC (50ºF). And, 5 min. or more after the engine starts, the temp. sensor value is 5ºC (41ºF) or less.

    2) When the engine starts, the coolant temp. is -7ºC (20ºF) or less. And, 20 min. or more after the engine starts, the temp. sensor value is 5ºC (41ºF) or less.
     
  5. subarutoo

    subarutoo New Member

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    I bought my Prius in January, and have never seen the blue light. Does it not get cold enough in California, or what? I've started the car at near freezing weather, and never saw a "cold" blue light. What gives?
     
  6. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    Subarutoo, your 2006 Prius has a different display system, so one of these young whippersnappers is going to have to provide that answer.
     
  7. fortysixandtwo

    fortysixandtwo New Member

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    I did check the coolant levels and it was low. I hope there is not a leak, is it normal for the level to be low? I never had to add anti-freeze to a car before. And there is only 55,000 miles on it. So I find that weird, unless hybrids use more anti-freeze? Hopefully its fixed now.
     
  8. marjam

    marjam Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(subarutoo @ Aug 25 2006, 01:04 AM) [snapback]309197[/snapback]</div>
    There is no blue light on the 04-06 Prius. And it is a low coolant temperature light not a low coolant light. They were on GM products in the late 50's and 60's instead of a temperature gauge. It is only a problem when it stays on for a long time. (Probably means the the thermostat in the engine is not closing properly.)
     
  9. David Beale

    David Beale Senior Member

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    The more I read this topic the more scared I get.

    Low coolant is unusual at 55,000 mi?
    You do change your coolant, don't you? It shouldn't be in the engine for more than the above mileage (unless you're a very high mileage driver).

    Ethalene glycol coolant (usually green) should be changed every two years.

    Propylene glycol coolant (usually straw) should be changed every five years.

    Do NOT use RV system anti-freeze as coolant. It will corrode your system.

    Failure to change the coolant WILL result in coolant leaks. It will be caused by corrosion eating holes through the metal of your engine and/or radiator!

    No car should loose coolant in normal operation. The only time it could be lost is if:
    1. You overheat the engine and it overpressures and this overwelms the overflow capture tank.
    2. You have not changed worn out coolant hoses and one bursts.
    3. You have a gasket failure in the engine - coolant then can either leak outside and drip onto the pavement, or can be inhaled by the engine and burned.

    Warning - coolant is flamable. Leaks are not a minor matter. If coolant leaks onto hot exhaust parts it could start a fire! Leaks are also an environmental problem. Coolant is toxic, and many animals will lick it up as it tastes sweet. It will kill them!
     
  10. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    fortysixandtwo, your 2003 Prius uses Toyota LLC coolant (red) in both the engine and inverter coolant loops. The specified life is 30k miles. I would not react strongly to minor variations in level of the overflow reservoir unless there was other evidence of leaking.

    The new Prius used Toyota SLLC pink coolant (for both loops), with a 50k mile change interval. The classics can switch to that, and enjoy the longer conge interval. I have not done so yet, in fact about 3500 miles past due for a coolant change. But it remains very clean and I do not feel any sense of urgency.