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New owner of '05 with only 200 miles

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by 2005, Sep 14, 2016.

  1. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    The Hybrid Automotive prolong charger guide shows benefits of discharging a module to bring it's usable capacity back. But from the pack being wired in a series and discharging with a load....wouldn't this potentially harm a cell in the module while discharging vs helping it bring back usable capacity?

    I ask because I'm in the process of rebuilding a pack and from what I saw in techstream, I had 1 weak block. I replaced that block and discharged according to HA instructions.....but then I ended up with another weak block after a short drive. Would the discharging of the pack actually have harmed it to the point where another module would fail?
     
  2. Coast Cruiser

    Coast Cruiser Senior Member

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    I think it might be wise to change the oil first. Was there any oil in it?
     
  3. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    Good point. I hate tunnel vision!

    Might as well check and, if necessary, replace all the other fluids too.
     
  4. 2005

    2005 New Member

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    The car came with a note saying the oil was changed before it was put up plus two cases of OEM 5w30 Toyota oil, one case of synthetic, the other regular oil, and 12 oil filters. When the car was bought, they also bought an assortment of spare parts, including two sets of original wheels, each fitted with different type tires, (winter and summer highway tread, plus the original tire set which was stored away). There's spare switches, fuel pumps, some sort of inverter, cables, door handles, latches, window regulator parts, and two sets of OEM seat covers to match the car. When he bought a car he planned to have it forever, and to have it in perfect shape forever. He was fanatic about his cars, regardless if it was a daily driver or classic. He was also good for buying two cars at once, keeping the second one as a backup stored away in the garage eventually using the first one for parts. I think the one I have here was the second car that was intended to replace another one. They're still finding things he had stored away, there may well be another Prius stored away with more miles, or perhaps, no miles. (He had over 30 cars put away like this, I ended up with three of them so far and have the option to buy a few others from the estate if other family members don't take them.
    Most of the classics are really old, crank start old. I'm debating on whether or not to take one of those as well but I lack garage space here and would hate to watch a classic weather away outdoors.

    The arrow only goes to the engine side of the screen when I hold the brake and step down on the pedal.

    It took me a while to figure out how to operate this thing in the first place. First off we didn't know what the keys looked like or that it was a key fob not a key, then it took a few tries to figure out that the brake had to be stepped on while hitting the power button.
    Then it took a bit to figure out how to shift it forward and reverse, (the lever kept snapping back to the middle), I finally figure out it was supposed to do that. I drove the car 100 of the 200 miles on it get it home after replacing the 12v battery. If the HV battery starts the car, then it was never dead, but the battery indicator has yet to how more than one bar. The engine seems to take over around 24 mph or so, but I drove it around the block here a few times at about 18 mph and the battery didn't seem to drop any.
     
  5. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    Some things are not stacking up in my mind from what you have said about the behavior of the car. It certainly sounds like the battery could be good, or it could be bad. Some the things you have said seem to contradict each other, such as:

    Maybe, can you take a photo of the Energy Monitor screen and post, or even take a short video of the Energy Monitor screen while doing the force charge? It would be very helpful to see what you see.

    FWIW, if this is happening:
    then that says to me the car is being propelled by the electric motor and would not be happening if the HV was bad.

    Look forward to hearing more of this "classic" car.
     
    PriusGuy32 likes this.
  6. 09Prius2

    09Prius2 Member

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    Apparently the car is indeed driveable. Fill up the tank, drive it down to one bar, refill it, calculate the mileage. If its under 35-40 than you can get a used battery off ebay under 1k. Well worth it for such a pristine car.
     
  7. 2005

    2005 New Member

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    When I come to a stop, the engine shuts down, from what i read that's normal.
    The battery indicator on the screen never shows more than one bar? The arrows do switch direction but only when standing still with my foot on the brake and throttle.

    If it weren't for the display, I'd never have questioned about anything being wrong.
     
  8. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    Yes, that is completely normal, when the car is warmed up. Read about the 5 stages of prius warm up in my sig for more information about how the HSD warms up.

    What colour are the bars on the battery icon?

    Any chance you can upload a photo?
     
  9. 2005

    2005 New Member

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    I just watched a few videos on Youtube showing one like mine in operation, the screen on those cars don't act or look like mine while running in that my battery indicator bars never climb, it just stays at one bar, never less, never more. It was at one bar when I first got it powered up, and its at one bar 116 miles later. So far I've gone through about a 1/4 tank of gas in 110 miles since filling it up. I put a 2.5 gal. jug of gas in the tank when I first went to get it running, then it took just short of 8 gallons at the pump.
    The mpg indicator varies, mostly it reads pretty high, over 48 mpg unless I'm standing still and holding the throttle down.
    There was a recall on the car, something about the pedals so it went back to the dealer before the drive home, they told me that the battery was most likely bad, thus the low reading on the screen. But it does start fine and I can drive it for at least several miles at lower speeds, (not fast enough for the gas engine to come on), and it still reads one bar. When coasting and braking the arrow points toward the battery bars, when driving the arrows reverse. At roughly 18 mph around the neighborhood here, it never runs off gas. How fast would a good HV battery last if you ran it strictly in electric mode at low speeds?

    I don't have a digital camera, I'll see if I can find someone with a camera in their phone that can snap a pic but no promises, most of my buddies all use flip phones with no camera. I do have a film camera but no way to scan in a pic anymore.

    Is it possible that the battery meter is just wrong? The one vid online shows a guy driving a gen 2 car about a mile and it dropped from full charge down one bar, I've been three times that distance or more and the one bar showing hasn't changed.
    If the dealer hadn't said it needed a battery I wouldn't be here, I'd have just driven the car and been fine with it the way it is. I hadn't even touched that screen the whole ride home.
     
  10. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    The only thing that sounds weird is the fact the battery only shows 1 (purple?) bar always. Yes it is possible that the meter is broken, because otherwise everything else you have said, it sounds like the car is driving normally.

    Until the battery shows a higher charge, I would encourage you to not keep trying to drive in EV. It is not the correct way anyway, as it places a higher demand on you HV battery (obviously). So, until you can connect it up to Techstream (VxDiag with Techstream) and see what the battery voltages and currents are for each block, I would encourage you to run the ICE to run as much as possible. If it wants to run in EV so be it, just don't try to make it happen for the moment.

    You could try disconnecting the 12 V battery to reset all the ECUs. This will among other things force the metering on the HV to recalibrate.

    The only other thing I would try is an external charge of the HV (using the HA conditioning charger, available in the PC shop or directly from Hybrid Automotive) and see what that shows after 24 hours on charge.

    I don't know if there are any PCers in NJ that could help out.

    PS, you haven't mentioned any warning lights on the dash, so assuming there are no lights–which is good.
     
  11. Coast Cruiser

    Coast Cruiser Senior Member

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    You didn't start that engine with 9-year old oil in it, did you? Did you buy fresh oil? Did you say you were a mechanic?

    There's no way I would drive a car with 9-year old oil in it! And all that "extra" oil has an expiration date, so that's no good. And are all those extra tires showing any small cracks in the sidewall rubber?

    There's something fishy about this whole story..

    Most of my buddies use flip-phones with no camera....
     
  12. kinglew

    kinglew Member

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    I smell a troll with out pic hard to believe!!!
     
  13. kinglew

    kinglew Member

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    Troll
     
  14. fotomoto

    fotomoto Senior Member

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    In my youth, I sold motorcycles and came across two customers similar to this. One who did the whole "I'm going to buy a lifetime supply of parts" and then sold it about two years later and the other who had a garage that was more a shrine (I delivered that bike) with carpet and everything! In addition, I have a friend who's wealthy father amassed a very large collection of unopened boxed models (ships, planes, cars); so many they needed a large warehouse to store them all.

    The original owner of the '05 sounds like a hoarder personality but with a much more clinical approach. The description of the '05 storage is a nearly textbook perfect way for long term storage.
     
  15. Blizzard_Persona

    Blizzard_Persona Senior Member

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    Dang! I put at least 200+ miles on my car in just a few days...

    A 2005!! Wow!
     
    #35 Blizzard_Persona, Sep 15, 2016
    Last edited: Sep 15, 2016
  16. eman08

    eman08 Active Member

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    I bought my 09 Prius with 160k miles on it back in June. Runs great! But far as battery degrading, it's more of an age thing rather than mileage on the car. I should still get another few year's or so or maybe even far longer on this 7 year old car with its original battery.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  17. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    If you cannot drive at higher speeds and the soc is at 1 bar all the time, then the battery is bad.

    200 miles is not the trip meter right, it's the actual odometer reading?
     
  18. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    He didn't say he could not drive at high speed, he said that the ICE cuts in at 18 mph, which means that he is in EV until then. If the battery was bad, he could not do that. He also said he could drive for quite awhile with the ICE off, if he kept the speed at 18 mph.
    Good point.
     
  19. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    I don't know how much of this is accurate. OP claims to have driven several miles at 18mph without the gas engine turning on.

    "But it does start fine and I can drive it for at least several miles at lower speeds, (not fast enough for the gas engine to come on)"

    I can't even drive 1 miles on my BRAND NEW battery without the engine coming on.

    I think we're getting punked
     
  20. jeff652

    jeff652 Senior Member

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    It all depends on the load. If the discharge load current is low enough, around 200mA is what we recommend, then there is no cell damage from having the polarity reversed for a while. If this is done at a high load (1A or more) like the hobby chargers often use, then yes the cells can and will be damaged by a polarity reversal event. What type of current load are you using to deep discharge the pack?

    In close to 2,500 customers, we have had one other customer report that reconditioning his pack lead to a module showing weakness that it had not shown pre-reconditioning. He also may have left his 200W bulb on all the way to 0V, we're not sure (he couldn't remember either). If a module was borderline and/or weak enough that deep discharging from reconditioning brought about its demise, I'd say that is one you want to replace as well :)