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Bad Catalytic Converter - 2012 Prius v (lowercase v for Prius v) Three

Discussion in 'Prius v Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by bobjdavis, Dec 2, 2014.

  1. bobjdavis

    bobjdavis Junior Member

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    I've got an out of warranty v (lowercae v for Prius v) with 88K miles (I drive a lot for work). It's my 5th Prius, starting with the Gen 2. Check engine light presented a few times in the last month, but stayed on permanently last week. Took to dealership to find out that repair requires a new catalytic converter, with an estimate of more than $2500. Warranty had expired at 80K miles.

    Has anyone had this experience? Secondly, has anyone had any luck getting Toyota (regional or national) to cover repairs for out of warranty issues? I realize that 88K for 3 years is heavy use, but it's not absurd. That's why I drive a Prius.

    Any thoughts or suggestions are appreciated.
     
  2. Munpot42

    Munpot42 Senior Member

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    Location:
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    Vehicle:
    Other Hybrid
    If you get no help from Toyota, try an independent mechanic, cost should be much less.....
     
  3. alekska

    alekska Active Member

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    Feb 14, 2010
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    Vehicle:
    2005 Prius
    Used unit, from a crashed V is probably much cheaper. Any muffler shop should be able to weld it in

    - Alex
     
  4. mikefocke

    mikefocke Prius v Three 2012, Avalon 2011

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    Limited
    My experience on other cars is most often a cat readout is the sensor and not the converter itself and about your mileage is where the sensors start to fail. My last car I had a sensor go at 65k and after replacement all was normal. They just age because they sit in the stream of exhaust gasses.

    I don't know how Toyota does it but I've seen setups where there are pre and post converter sensors or just one.

    So I'd ask what was the exact code and could it be just the sensor.

    Converters go bad early most often because something unusual was dumped into them that they couldn't cope with. Some magic gas additive or even unburned gas from and engine valve system failure. I know of folks with 250k on their converters.

    A normal muffler shop can handle either a sensor or a cat at a lot less cost than a dealer. A sensor takes 15 minutes, most waiting for the exhaust system to cool down once the car is driven onto the lift.

    And I don't know who makes the sensors for Toyota but on my non-Toyota brand car I did find out who made em before the car manufacturer stenciled their logo onto them and repackaged them. Saved 50% in parts.
     
    alekska likes this.
  5. rdgrimes

    rdgrimes Senior Member

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    Location:
    New Mexico, USA
    Vehicle:
    2018 Prius Prime
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    I thought the emissions system had a longer warranty?