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Battery Maintenance - Revive your Dead or Dying 12v Aux Battery

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by DG Bear, Mar 16, 2015.

  1. Heather Cain

    Heather Cain Junior Member

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    I've been having a really odd problem with my Prius starting, or holding charge maybe.
    I'm not sure if it's the 12v battery or if it's the alternator. I just had both checked my a standard mechanic and they claimed both are fine.

    Here's what's happening:
    I have a very small collision that ended up taking my car to the body shop. When I got it back, unfixed,
    the car battery was dead. I assumed they unhooked it, but I really don't know.

    After a week I had it jumped and took it to my mechanic. they recharged the battery fully or so it seemed.
    I made a habit of starting it once a day, but I can't drive it as it's not street legal yet. Twice now, I missed starting it one day
    and the next day it was dead. It doesn't seem to be holding charge to start longer than 24hours after the battery seems to be
    fully recharged. I talked the the toyota dealer, they suspected the 12v. i suspected the alternator, but after this once shops
    says both are fine, I'm at a loss.

    Any ideas? similar problems? i can't afford to pay a dealer to "$200 look at it".

    t's a 2005 Prius, I'm unsure if the origianl battery 12v or not, as I bought it used 3 years ago.
     
  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    there is no alternator. buy a digital multimeter. under the hood, inside the fuse box, there is a 12v jump point. it's in your owners manual. in the morning, before turning the car on, open the passenger door, crawl across the armrest and release the hood latch. don't use the drivers door, because it starts a bunch of things that reduce the battery voltage. put the red lead from the multimeter on the jump point, and the black lead to an unpainted bolt on the engine or chassis. if it measures less than 12.5 volts, buy a new battery. i believe you need a new battery. stay away from the guy who said the alternator is fine.
     
    #22 bisco, Mar 27, 2015
    Last edited: Mar 27, 2015
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  3. Easy Rider 2

    Easy Rider 2 Senior Member

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    Most of Bisco's reply is spot on.

    The simple answer is: The body shop "wounded" your old battery and what you are doing by starting it without driving is putting more nails in the coffin.

    You WILL need a new 12 V battery before you put it back on the street and that will cost you about $200.
    The new battery needs to be fully charged before use.
     
  4. DG Bear

    DG Bear Junior Member

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    Easy Rider 2 - On your recommendation, let’s keep it to just one of your points.

    This is almost comical… where do you get this information from?
    Are you just cutting and pasting random information from the web?

    Do you even know what float voltage is?

    Like most of your statements... they sound almost intelligent… but they don’t solve any problems and under further review they have no context or bearing on the subject at hand.

    1. The condition I sited was not in a “float” situation.

      The battery had been discharging overnight and the car just transitioned into the ready state.
      This is not a float situation so you comments are out of context and meaningless.


    2. Your comment “. If you are applying 14.5 volts when the battery is already fully charged it is guaranteed to "boil" out the water from the electrolyte solution rather quickly

      Wrong again… I already point this out to you in post 16 b).
      You made-up the part about the battery being fully charged and being constantly charged.


      Also, By the chemistry, the battery can’t be at 12.2 and be fully charged.
      You can’t have it both ways...

      But since you’re and expect at gloom and doom… Show us where you get 14.5v “is guaranteed to "boil" out the water from the electrolyte solution rather quickly”

      While you’re at it… tell us your definition of “rather quickly”?

      You’re such and expert at making this stuff so complicated and scary... we'd liked to know how long we have before it gets really bad.
    What point are you trying to make here... is this more follow-up from your other nonsense posts:

    Is it related to you comment “Your battery won't last long"
    Already proven you wrong on this one… battery life has been extended 9 month and counting.

    Or “battery which will spew out acid fumes
    No… not that point… already proved you wrong on that one too.

    Or “you might be amazed to see all the corrosion that has happened in the battery pan."
    No… not that point… already proved you wrong on that one too.

    Or any of the other points you’ve thrown off the wall but can’t back up?​

    Please take your rhetoric elsewhere… it’s not solving any problems and adds no material value to the conversation.
     
  5. Easy Rider 2

    Easy Rider 2 Senior Member

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    Words are important.
    I said ***IF*** the voltage was at 14.5 when fully charged.

    The rest of your post is just insulting, inflamatory BS and I refuse to be drawn into it.

    I'm not making anything up. I've been in the Electronics industry probably longer than you have lived; maybe a LOT longer so I don't need any self-serving crap from you.

    Have a nice day.
     
  6. DG Bear

    DG Bear Junior Member

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    Welcome Heather,

    Before attempting to repair or replace the battery... you need to verify this is the real issue.
    There is no reason to throw $200 at the problem and hope you fix it with a new Aux battery.

    Something may have been dammaged in the accident or your battery may simply need a throughal charge. Currently you have too many unknowns. You have to take a few steps to get to a known reference point. Once you do we can help you troubleshoot from there.

    bisco suggestions are excellent...

    You need a voltage measurement. The best method is to take an independant measurement on the battery from an independant source such as a voltmeter. Being from Boston you should be able to pickup a cheap DVM at lots of places (and of course online).

    Another methiod you can use if the display is operational is to use the car's System Check Mode." It will display the voltage on the screen. I'm not totally familar with this car but there are losts of good posts on this site.
    There's also a visual proceedure at this site:
    http://priusdiy.com/tutorials/MFD/12vbatterycheck.html

    Good luck
     
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  7. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    The combination of (likely) draining when the car was in the body shop, coupled with the car mainly sitting now, since it's not street legal, likely means you're going to need a new battery. Just starting the car up and running for a few minutes isn't enough to maintain it. You could remove it from the car, and perdiodically hook up to a smart charger. But with the battery being over 3 years old, and having taken a few knocks, I'd throw in the towel. Might as well wait 'till it is street legal.
     
  8. DG Bear

    DG Bear Junior Member

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    Again you're trying to changing the subject matter.

    You said IF... but you also made-up the whole condition and associated rant.
    Plus you didn't say "IF" on your debacle about "float".​

    Your reply was misleading and not relevant to the original post data.


    If that means you'll stop posting BS... thank you.

    I'm tired of having to respond to it and it’s a waste of everyone's time. You turned this post into a circus on your very 1st comment then proceeded to discredit anyone who had an opinion with statements that you can't backup.

    I like the way you say you refuse to be drawn in to it... you created his BS. I just got tired of hearing all your negative and unverifiable nonsense. My post to you is simply responses to your bad information. Just because you say you’re "sure" you’re not wrong and saying you’re not making anything up doesn’t make it so. If you have facts to backup your points please site them.

    Now that you’ve been called out on your bad claims your only response has been to blame others. Everyone is wrong except you (yet you cannot backup a single claim). Name one or two issues that I have been wrong about... I’m happy to learn from you.
    Don't just makeup data like you usually do... site our source so it can be verified.

    If you want to show your expertise or honesty... try putting a voltmeter on the Prius and look at the facts. When you do you'll have to come to terms with the fact that posted all this bad information. Facts do matter... use the voltmeter and report back your finding versus your previous opinions. Or better yet... stop this nonsense.

    Finally, Not that it matters... but just because you think you've been in the Electronics industry for longer than others doesn't make your bad feedback any more credible. I graduated summa cum laude with an electronic degree and have more than enough expertise to null yet another one of your baseless assumptions.

    In my humble option its not able the training... its how you use it and how you listen and learn as time marches forward. We can all learn from one another and I look forward to learning from you in a positive post in the future.
     
    #28 DG Bear, Mar 28, 2015
    Last edited: Mar 28, 2015
  9. DG Bear

    DG Bear Junior Member

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    Mendel Leisk made some good points on the time lines...

    Heather, you never mentioned how long it was in the body shop or why its not street legal. You also didn't mention how long you are running the car after doing your daily start test. Perhaps your running it for too short of a time frame and the net effect is a drain on the battery. You may not even have a real problem (and perhaps all that's needed is a good charge cycle).

    I also wouldn't see the need to start it every day but in any case the requirement to get a voltage reading is the same. Once you have some voltage readings we can provide more intelligent troubleshooting.

    If this is going to be an extended time frame you will want to consider hooking it up to a charger. You don't want to keep the battery in a discharge mode indefinetly. You can easily use a charger to charge the battery in the car.

    Both a battery charger and a DVM are not very expensive and are handy to have for various situations.
     
  10. Easy Rider 2

    Easy Rider 2 Senior Member

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    Now the evidence points to outright lying. Nobody who really graduated from college with honors would make the grammatical errors that you have made AND would not say that they have "an electronic degree" because there is no such thing.

    I know that you don't care.......or are too dense to understand but for others who might still be reading this thread:

    A sealed battery is intended to NEVER be opened to add water.
    If the water IS boiled out of the electrolyte solution, that is a SYMPTOM of a problem and not the cause.

    Either there is a leak in the battery somewhere OR the charging system is not working right OR the battery has developed an internal fault that causes the charging system to charge too much.
    Period, end of discussion.

    The battery is designed to NOT boil off electrolyte.
    The charging system is designed to NOT boil off electrolyte.
    If the electrolyte IS disappearing, something is wrong and adding back water to the battery IS NOT THE FIX.

    Done.
    Further ranting will be ignored.
     
  11. Heather Cain

    Heather Cain Junior Member

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    Sorry, I've been so busy with work and trying to get this fixed. To answer a few of these questions:

    1.) Body Shop Time - was about 3 weeks - a month. I'm certain it was DEAD 90% of time while there, as after 3 days when I picked up my belongings from it from the lot, it was already dead. I asked why the car was dead and the person there said they probably disconnected it. I have no idea why and asked and he said he didn't know. When they towed it to my house, I insisted they make sure it was charged so that it could be locked. They agreed, but when the car was delivered, it was dead again. The tow driver had to jump it to get it into neutral.

    2.) The reason it isn't currently street legal is that is is missing the left headlamp and bumper. The fender also needs replacing. Basically it was considered a TOTAL but only based off body work. I was informed there was no mechanical damage. As the small impact hit the front right side of the car very low.

    3.) It's true I don't drive it every day. I try starting it every day for at least 15 - 30 minutes and sometimes when I have time and it's night, I drive around in a circle around my house avoiding the police for maybe 5 - 10 minutes to charge it up. But it doesn't seem to matter, if it's not started at least ONCE every 24 hours, it dies.

    4.) I have bought a battery 12v and it's ready, but I'm starting to worry it could be another or bigger probably. I'm concerned that it could be the hybrid battery and one or another mechanic not knowing what they were doing did something incorrectly. to damage the electrical system. I just don't know.

    5.) When I run the dash test, ala lights 3 times, it always read the voltage over 14.0 I assumed this was the reading of the hybrid batter?

    And I know everyone keeps telling me to buy a reader, buy a charger, but I really CAN'T afford it at all, I'm buying everything to fix on this Prius myself out of pocket, as the insurance barely gave me anything for it even with full coverage. In addition, things just aren't financially solid at the moment and overall without this unexpected battery/starting issue, it's costing me 2,000 - $5,000 in body work.

    I feel like I should be able to just to go to a mechanic and them tell me whats wrong, but it seems I need a Prius specialist?
     
  12. Heather Cain

    Heather Cain Junior Member

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    Oh, Oh Oh, 1 thing I forgot to mention. the impact pushed the passenger side door back just a little but, so it's not lining up quite perfectly a little off. The door signal normally thinks it open unless I give it a good hip check fonzi shut, then the car's locking system with lock. I'd imagine if it locks then the door wouldn't be telling the car it's OPEN? Could it be faulty and the door be causing it to drain?
     
  13. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    you need someone with a toyota specific reader. if you can't find anyone, you will have to go to a dealer.
     
  14. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    try avi's automotive, he's a helpful member here.
     
  15. Heather Cain

    Heather Cain Junior Member

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    I'm hoping that NON dealerships have this reader? Any easy was to search for a location that possesses this? I'm located in South Los Angeles.
     
  16. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    are you near avi's automotive? i can't think of a way unless they advertise toyota repair.
     
  17. Heather Cain

    Heather Cain Junior Member

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    Avi's is about 45m - 1 hour from me. But getting my car there wouldn't be possible until I had the frame fixed. so that's down the road.
     
  18. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    judging from this post, it's your 12 volt. you need to disconnect the negative battery cable in between use until you're back on the road again.
     
  19. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    he's a good guy. you may want to call and run things by him for advice.
     
  20. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Several years ago for fun, I also removed the top label on the 12V GS Yuasa battery that was standard equipment on my 2001, when I replaced it with a larger Panasonic battery. As you pointed out there is no issue removing the rectangular plastic cover over the six vents, or the rubber caps over the vents themselves.

    When I removed the caps, I noticed that the lead plates were separated by the white fuzzy mats which AGM batteries have. When you looked into your battery, did you see those white mats or just the grey lead plates?

    If you just saw the grey lead plates then it was very appropriate to cover the plates with distilled water.

    If you saw the white fuzzy mats, then I personally would have been content just adding a couple of ounces of water to each of the six cells. The idea is not to drown the AGM battery cells in water.

    I think it is great that you are trying to extend the life of your 12V battery. However, 12.2V is not very high (compared to a new, fully-charged 12V AGM battery which will measure 13.0V out of the box, open-circuit). Have you tried putting your battery on a 4A charger overnight to see if you can bring the battery charge to a higher level?
     
    #40 Patrick Wong, Apr 19, 2015
    Last edited: Apr 19, 2015
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