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06' Prius SOC at highway speeds

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by dcrabtree, Aug 16, 2015.

  1. dcrabtree

    dcrabtree New Member

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    Hey everyone, needing some advice on a issue with my 06' prius that I believe to be abnormal behavior. Just took the car on a 360 mile round trip. After about an hour of driving (Interstate 78mph) I happened to notice on the Energy screen that the car stared to use the electric motor steadily for about 5 minutes of driving on flat terrain (Kansas). I watched as the SOC went from 5-6 bars down to 1-2 (purple). At which time the car started experiencing bouts of high rpm on level terrain/small hills. It stayed in this state for over 20 minutes or so of driving. It acted like it knew it needed to charge the hybrid battery, however the level never increased until such time as I exited the interstate and started braking. Am I wrong in assuming that the HV battery should rarely discharge that much traveling at highway speeds on flat terrain? And if it did, shouldn't it recharge somewhat quickly again at highway/Interstate speeds?
     
  2. Andyprius1

    Andyprius1 Senior Member

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    My experience with the Gen 2 at Highway speeds ( 55 - 60 ) in cruise control, is basicall no charge, unless theres a nice downhill portion. Each time the brakes are touched there is a small amount of charging. To accomplish larger regen the brakes must be pushed forcefully. I dont know how you documented RPM, but what you hear is mostly the flywheel spinning. If you put a big load on the car ( 78 mpg ) nothing phenominal will occur, except that you are there faster. The Prius is designed for conservative driving.
     
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  3. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    sounds like your battery might be going south, how many miles on her? potentially, it could just be an overheating issue.
     
  4. Andyprius1

    Andyprius1 Senior Member

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    To be blunt NO. If you are interested in charging the HV Bat during a trip: Stop, get some coffee, sit in car, run engine, put foot on brake also, full handbrake THEN..... put in drive, step on gas pedal. This is called force charging. It can charge the battery really quickly. If I remember correctly, 1-3 minutes. No gasoline saved however.
     
  5. dcrabtree

    dcrabtree New Member

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    I just bought the car used a couple months ago with 101K on it. Had an excellent service record a thru Toyota. The dealer I bought if from (not Toyota dealer) just had a "new" (reman) battery pack installed. I don't have any issue whatsoever around town or even shorter highway speed trips (less than an hour). Just noticed this behavior as this is probably the second longer trip i have taken with it.

    At first i thought it maybe was a battery maintenance feature where it bled off battery charge to allow it to recharge going down the road as a means to exercise the batteries or something. I did notice that if I hit the breaks or had to slow down that at some point it started charging the battery back up to the 5-6 bar range. I'm kinda leaning towards a possible overheating of the HV battery. The batteries seem to be performing as they should (charging/discharging) but a some point after about an hour or so of driving the car steadily starts using the electric motor and drains the pack. Strange
     
  6. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    what was the outside temp at the time? you may want to clean the battery cooling fan.
     
  7. dcrabtree

    dcrabtree New Member

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    The outside temp was about 97 degrees. The car was in "auto" A/C re-circulation mode, set to 79 degrees cabin temp. Obviously while going down the road i cant hear the battery pack fan running, but i did check to see if it was running while parked this morning. I put my ear up to the intake vent and hear fan moving. I don't know how fast that fan should be running at any given time, however, it was running. I doubt when the HV battery was replaced the mechanic took the time to clean the fan or filters. It would probably be worth doing for several reasons, but mainly to check to see if the fan ducting was put back in place correctly when the battery was replaced. I'm told there are a # of service bulletins regarding both the car and battery ECU.

    What makes this issue so tough to diagnose is the fact that I have no warning lights illuminated, the car acts and drives perfectly around town and the problem only arises after approx. 1 hour of continuous driving at Interstate speeds (that i know). It may not be a "Problem" at all and just circumstance and/or perception, but I definitely don't believe the behavior to be correct.
     
  8. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    what kind of battery did you get?
     
  9. JimN

    JimN Let the games begin!

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    You aren't experiencing normal operation. It sounds like your problem is heat related. Short hops around town aren't enough to make the weak part "too hot" but driving an hour at Interstate speed is. I suspect there is at least one weak cell in your refurb battery. Get a copy of the warranty to see if you have any recourse.

    The symptoms will happen more often and get worse. You'll get the codes and the warning lights when the situation gets bad enough. Start exploring your options while you still can at your convenience. You don't want to start when you are parked on the side of the road waiting for a tow.
     
  10. dcrabtree

    dcrabtree New Member

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    JimN, thanks for your reply. I'm hoping that isn't the case, but obviously can't rule it out. I'm not sure how having a bad cell in the pack would cause the car to drain it's entire pack for no reason going down the road, but we are talking electronics and batteries here. I do agree it seems to be something that "heats up" during extended driving that is causing the issue.

    Just had a base diagnostic at my local mechanic and he said there were no codes in the car and everything passed the diagnostic on the scan tool. Of course the HV pack was not load tested during this so there is no real way to see if there is a problem with the battery pack. His advice was to monitor it in different driving conditions as best I could to see if it did the same thing under other circumstances. He stated that generally speaking if there is a gremlin hiding in the battery pack, ECU, etc. it should show itself at some point by throwing a code.
     
  11. JimN

    JimN Let the games begin!

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    The pack isn't draining for no reason.

    A healthy battery provides power from all the cells. Weak or dead cells cause the remaining good ones to provide more discharging the battery quicker. The engine spins up & runs to charge the battery. It has to run longer as it tries to recharge the weak & bad cells.

    A weak battery will take less time to discharge and longer to charge (if it will).

    The individual cell voltages should have been checked. Buying Toyota's TechStream should prove to be a good investment especially if you plan to stay with Toyotas.

    If your battery was still under warranty I'd agree that waiting for complete failure and the resulting DTC is the best course of action. Toyota would pick your car up from wherever it is stranded and drop a new battery in it.

    But you are out of warranty so you are on your own with whatever warranty is on the reman battery. Hope for the best but plan for the worst.
     
  12. geekwithoutacause

    geekwithoutacause Junior Member

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    I would check the cooling fan first. They get clogged and will cause the HV battery to stay too hot to be charged a lot of any at all.
    I recently did the cleaning and it was very easy.
     
  13. Surnp

    Surnp Junior Member

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    I just got back from a 600 mile mostly interstate driving trip last week. I noticed the same thing with the battery. If you think about it, if you're not going downhill, the wheels are not providing any recharging ability especially with no hills. When I slowed down to exit for a couple of times and driving in town for a short while, the battery was charging whereas on the interstate it was not. I think this must be a fairly normal operation of the car. Since I've been back and driving in town again, it charges like it did before I made the trip.
     
  14. Aaron Vitolins

    Aaron Vitolins Senior Member

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    I've driven a few Prii and they all stay at 6 blue bars on the highway at any speed as long as it's mostly flat. But if it goes down a bar it will charge it back up to 6 after a while. That's how the HSD is designed to operate
     
  15. Aaron Vitolins

    Aaron Vitolins Senior Member

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    I drive hundreds of miles a week, mostly at 70mph.
     
  16. dcrabtree

    dcrabtree New Member

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    Thanks for all the advice guys. As this is the first Prius I have owned it is nice to get the opinions of those who are more experienced. I have service appointment for an oil change/inspection this week. I am going to mention the problem to them and see if they can diagnose it. I'm hoping that they will be able to give me an answer, or at the very least test the HV pack to see it's condition. It very well may be something like a ECU or the like. It seems to me to be computer related of some sort as I'm not getting any warning lights, car works flawlessly around town, and the pack seems to charge normally if I just hit the brakes on the Interstate once and awhile. I will post what I find out from Toyota. I'm hoping its not a long and painful road to fix.
     
  17. Aaron Vitolins

    Aaron Vitolins Senior Member

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    Maybe you could upload a video of your energy monitor on the highway, so we could see how it compares to all of our Prii? Best of luck :)
     
  18. dcrabtree

    dcrabtree New Member

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    Will do, I have a couple on my phone. I will post them up.
     
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  19. JimN

    JimN Let the games begin!

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    Anything that isn't out of spec enough to throw a code is going to be "OK", "fine" or "good". If you are serious about a diagnostic get a print out of the voltages for the individual battery modules. What's the warranty on the battery?

    I don't remember a confirmed case of a battery ECU failure.
     
  20. dcrabtree

    dcrabtree New Member

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    JimN

    Not sure 100% on the warranty on the battery, as we bought it from a small dealership with the reman battery already installed by the local mechanic. I did get some paperwork (work order, invoice) for the battery so I will have to see if it mentions any warranty. However, given that the replacement was done for the dealership and not me, I wouldn't be surprised if whatever warranty there was wouldn't transfer to my ownership.

    I guess we will see what Toyota has to say. I'm hoping that they just don't "punt" on the issue knowing the battery is a reman and blame the hybrid pack. If the HV pack is the problem, fine at least I know that's what is causing the issue. I just don't want them pointing the finger at a part they didn't install simply because they don't know.
     
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