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Inverter Water Pump, Toyota likes to screw with us!!!

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by newemi, Oct 15, 2012.

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  1. Yes, they should pay for the entire repair

    6 vote(s)
    85.7%
  2. Yes, but should only pay for the part

    0 vote(s)
    0.0%
  3. No, if parts fail prematurely, its the consumers responsibility.

    1 vote(s)
    14.3%
  1. newemi

    newemi Junior Member

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    As you may know, Toyota recalled the Hybrid System Inverter Water Pump, voluntarily, knowing the part was a poor design and would fail prematurely, and possibly causing major damage to the hybrid system.

    However, the part they are replacing it with is no better then the original and just as likely to fail. But on top of that, they will not take responsibility for it the second time.

    How does that saying go? Burn me once, shame on you... burn me twice, shame on me.

    For the first time I am questioning Toyota. I have been an avid supporter of Toyota for a long time, and have talked up the Prius and 4runner since the day I bought them, much more than any other car I have owned. But now I no longer feel that I can call the Prius reliable... or say that Toyota takes care of their customers.


    Here's the story:
    Toyota replaced my working Inverter pump 14 months ago as part of a voluntary recall that they issued. The pump they put in was warranted for 12 months.

    Last week the part failed, and now must be replaced. After working with the dealer, Toyota, was only willing to pay for 20% of the repair costs. All the service advisers who have been involved have been surprised at Toyota's reaction, and agree that I should expect more (albeit under the table and off the recorded line). Toyota knows this is a problem part, and marginally out of warranty... I don't understand. Not to mention this is a part that fails over time, not just suddenly.

    I worked both the dealer angle and customer care. I won't get into all the details, but the dealer had the district manager make the 20% quickly, but once that decision was made, no one would offer anything more. So I moved to the customer care line, only to have a horrible experience. The case manager took three full business days to call me, regardless of my multiple calls and their 1 business day agreed call back period. And when he finally called, his response was, "i called yesterday" lol liar. Regardless, I waited three days for customer care to say "we can't override the district manager's original offer." This is just a bit ridiculous to me. I finally had to give the dealer the go ahead on the repairs. But my wallet hurts and I can only look at Toyota for the pain.

    I say it again, is it just me, or is this a bit ridiculous?
     
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  2. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Well, I disagree with the premise in your title: "Toyota likes to screw..." If that were the case, Toyota would not have bothered to recall the inverter coolant pumps to begin with.

    At some point the owner needs to accept responsibility for component failure. Your car is ~8 years old and I assume that all applicable warranty coverage has expired by now.

    I agree with your conclusion that the Prius is ultimately not going to be as reliable as some other 8-year-old vehicles. Recognize that Prius has many unique parts which you will not find in a car of regular design (inverter, traction battery, MFD, HID headlights, not to mention the supporting ECU units and other parts like the inverter coolant pump.) All of those parts have some non-zero probability of failure which, post-warranty, often will result in a four-digit repair bill - or three-digits in the case of the inverter coolant pump.

    On the other hand, Prius manages to show high reliability based upon surveys such as that administered by Consumer Reports.

    If you really want a totally-reliable vehicle then you should buy a Corolla or some other low-tech vehicle with a simple and trouble-free design.
     
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  3. Britprius

    Britprius Senior Member

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    The problem I find is that I have a 2008 Prius that is supposed to have the new pump on from new, and this will not be changed by Toyota even though they must know by now this is just as likely to fail. So i'm in a worse position "along with many others" than the OP.
     
  4. jadziasman

    jadziasman Prius owner emeritus

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    Sure, the OP's Prius is eight years old but the inverter pump was only a little more than a year old. It is not unreasonable to expect the replacement inverter water pump to last at least half the lifetime of the original.

    Haven't heard of too many complaints about replacement inverter water pumps (yet). I hope the replacement that was just installed in my Prius lasts longer than that - sheesh.
     
  5. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    I too got mine replaced via the LSC and agree w/your expectation.

    I haven't heard too many either, but the OP's is definitely not the first.
     
  6. sfv41901

    sfv41901 Masta S

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    Won't the dealer just "goodwill" the repair. If this is a dealer that u use for service on a reg basics, I would kinda demand that it be a goodwill repair.
     
  7. Britprius

    Britprius Senior Member

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    If you look back on PC you will find half a dozen posts about the new pumps failing in the past few weeks and more failing on 2008+ cars that are supposed to be the later pump.
     
  8. JimN

    JimN Let the games begin!

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    Was the original pump failing 14 months ago? If not, was it replaced because the free pump offer was expiring?

    The 12v Toyota battery I bought from the dealer lasted about 6 weeks and I believe a 1 year unlimited mileage warranty on replacement parts is pretty poor.

    I understand your anger. Perhaps you should contact Ford about trading in your Prius for their new hybrid & starring in a commercial for them.
     
  9. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Before doing that it might be appropriate to look for examples that demonstrate that Ford has a more generous policy (than Toyota), going beyond the terms of the product warranty when failures happen. If anyone can find such an example, I would be very interested.

    Here is an example that does not demonstrate any generosity on the part of Ford with regards to post-warranty support: spark plugs blowing out of the Ford modular V8 and V10 - which is a much costlier problem than an inverter coolant pump as the intake manifold has to be removed and the two cylinder heads replaced for a complete repair. This primarily is a problem with trucks since the engine bears a greater load under truck duty, but V8-equipped passenger cars also potentially can be affected by the issue:
    Spark Plug Problems - Ford Truck Enthusiasts Forums
    Spit Spark Plugs Still Hobble Ford Trucks
    mikescartalk.com - Ford's Spit-Out Spark Plugs Hit Mechanics in their Wallets
     
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  10. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    Ok, since that was stated as a fact, can I ask if anyone has definitive proof that there have been no improvements at all in the HV coolant pump design?

    Another thing to consider, and I truly hop this isn't the case, but I wonder if any shonky dealers have claimed to have replaced a (working) pump under recall but not actually performed the work. My local Toyota (ex)dealer actually tried out that trick on me. Luckily however I'd taken a good look at the pump before taking it in for recall and could recognize that it still had all the road dust (along with my finger marks) on it, and absolutely for 100% certain had not been touched by them!

    Hopefully dealers in the US are more honest then my local dealer, but serious who knows?
     
  11. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    Good friend Hobbit (who also analyzed the Gen2 MFD failure issue for us) has a full analysis of the Inverter Pump design, failure modes, and the ""Improved" design at:

    Inverter Pump

    I have the policy of replacing both the Inverter coolant and ICE coolant pumps (along with the "serpentine" belt that drives the ICE coolant pump) when replacing the coolant at 150k miles and again at 300k miles (My 2004 Prius is currently at 230k miles), assuming that neither fails in the interim (neither has failed for me ... yet).

    JeffD
     
  12. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    I don't have definitive proof but my personal experience with my 2004 is that the original pump lasted 81K miles and was still working fine when I replaced it as a preventive measure. The replacement lasted 49K miles and then died.
    See my post #106 here:
    How to Replace the Inverter Coolant Pump | Page 6 | PriusChat
     
  13. uart

    uart Senior Member

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    Thanks for the info Patrick.

    It seems pretty silly of Toyota to go to all the expense of a recall and not fix the problem. It looks like I'll have to keep a very close watch on the inverter cooling pump again this summer.
     
  14. Avi's Advanced Automotive

    Avi's Advanced Automotive Independent hybrid repair shop

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  15. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    I recognize that those inserts are available and represent a relatively low-cost repair approach. However IMO that approach seems like a half-a__ repair and I wonder how long it will be before the insert itself comes out of the cylinder head. The root cause seems to be an insufficient thread count holding the spark plug in the head due to inadequate thickness of the head material adjacent to the spark plug holes.

    Using the Prius inverter coolant pump as an example, an analogous approach might be to install a generic fluid pump bought from some cheap place like JC Whitney, instead of purchasing and installing the correct Toyota pump.
     
  16. nh7o

    nh7o Off grid since 1980

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    What is known about the specs for this pump? Flow rate? About 2A current draw. I'm not suggesting using an aquarium pump or anything, but in this world there are many pumps available.
     
  17. jadziasman

    jadziasman Prius owner emeritus

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    Oh no, please don't suggest this.

    Before you know it, there will be someone offering an aftermarket inverter pump which they'll claim is superior to the OEM part. It won't be. Automakers perform extensive testing on all components used for propelling a vehicle. Some fly-by-night outfit almost certainly won't.
     
  18. Avi's Advanced Automotive

    Avi's Advanced Automotive Independent hybrid repair shop

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    You are entitled to your own opinion. I on the other hand have experience as an auto technician. I am pretty sure those inserts do not blow out. In my opinion, replacing a junk cylinder head with another junk cylinder head isn't half a__, it is plain stupid, not to mention a waste of money. In this example I'd rather go with something you THINK is half a__ then a stupid waste of time and money.

    By the way, those inserts seem to have quite a bit more threads holding them into the cylinder head then the original spark plugs do.
     
  19. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    I agree that it would make no sense to replace the cylinder head with another head that has the same design flaw. However I understand that subsequent versions of the heads were redesigned to eliminate the flaw.

    I also agree that it would make sense for a cost-conscious owner to try the insert first, and see if it will stay put within the cylinder head. Using another Prius analogy, this would be like trying to replace just the one failed battery module (out of 28) in the Prius traction battery and hoping that would be sufficient. Peace.
     
  20. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    Yes Pat, but I can test the replacement module to find one that matches. Testing the inserts requires very specialized equipment. I would tend to rely on someone like AVI on that topic.

    JeffD