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ICE is Running, SoC is high, Car is Parked - ??!?

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by PriusNeckBeard, Nov 15, 2016.

  1. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    A regular Prius will start the engine within 10~15 seconds of the car being started. It is different than the Plug-In.
     
    #21 Mendel Leisk, Nov 16, 2016
    Last edited: Nov 16, 2016
  2. GT4Prius

    GT4Prius Active Member

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    Seems odd if MIN really means OFF ??? What does the manual say about MIN?

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  3. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    It's not merely that: In a Prius, the heater operates by heating the engine coolant, circulating it through a coil, and blowing air over it. So the only way the cabin can warm is if the engine is warm.

    The AC, however, is electric, so you can run it for a few minutes without starting the engine. One trick Plug-in Prius owners use to prevent the ICE from starting on a cold day is to turn off the heater, turn on the seat heaters, use the AC to demist the windshield and the rear defroster.
     
    #23 Rebound, Nov 16, 2016
    Last edited: Nov 16, 2016
  4. PriusNeckBeard

    PriusNeckBeard Active Member

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    Do we want the ICE to not run on a cold day? (Gen 3). Obviously, Mendel says it's inevitable. But should that be minimized ? To save gas or is it better for the engine in some way ?
     
  5. PriusNeckBeard

    PriusNeckBeard Active Member

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    Always ?
     
  6. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    With a cold engine, and EV button not pushed. With EV button pushed, you've got a 50/50 chance of the engine not starting, if ambient temps are quite high, and the phase of the moon is right.
     
  7. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    In my case, if I'm running a short errand, I don't want the engine to start at all.
     
  8. PriusNeckBeard

    PriusNeckBeard Active Member

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    Hey Mendel, I've never been able to sort the following out from various threads - I know there is a warm up stage of some sort, and various stages, etc. Yet the manual says not to worry about warming up a gen 3 prius.

    On top of all that confusion, I've got two choices coming out of my driveway:

    1. Go down a one block 40 degree hill, then up three blocks at 40 degrees. Down a long three -block hill, then back up again same.

    2. Go up a 1/2 block him, then gentle hills for a 1/4 mile.

    After that, I'm such with a 1 mile 30 degree upgrade.

    Once I get in the car and its start, do I need to worry about waiting to drive/thay first engine cycle, the warm up cycle after that, or even the hills and which way to go?

    Is there any consensus on that on PC.com ?
     
  9. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    I would avoid steep grades as much as possible, but sounds like you're surrounded, lol. (BTW: 40 degree??) And yeah, just start it and go, and be extra gentle on the gas pedal till the engine's warmed a bit. That's standard procedure for any car.
     
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  10. PriusNeckBeard

    PriusNeckBeard Active Member

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    I can do that!

    I did wonder about that! So hard to measure. They all qualify as "that's a good hill!", but none are treacherous. Lol :)

    Man, I really want to be a good boy....

    "Extra gentle" - meaning - stay out of the red PWR section on the HSI display? Or...?

    "till the engine's warmed a bit" - how long is that? (in the winter...spring/fall....and summer)

    Thanx !
     
  11. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Just try to avoid punching it for the first few blocks. Engines are most vulnerable with cold oil.
     
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  12. PriusNeckBeard

    PriusNeckBeard Active Member

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    Awesome! Thanks, man.
     
  13. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

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    Right, and more to the point you guys are dancing around, in some circumstances the engine of regular non-plug Prius shuts down if and only if the temperature setting (goal) is lower than the actual interior temperature (in the car's opinion). It does not have to be at "MIN."
     
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  14. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

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    Yes. I've seen that in the first one minute after a cold start, the car will run on battery power alone, unless you do "punch it." Therefore staying just below that threshold at which the engine reluctantly starts is bad for the battery, and going over the threshold is bad for the engine.
     
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  15. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Glad someone is listening, lol. Typical scenario for me: at a red light about 1/2 km from the house, partially warmed engine (I'm using block heater which accelerates warm up), ambient temp around 10~15C, cabin temp set to around 21C:

    The engine will shut off. Bump cabin temp 22C, the engine comes on. Lower cabin temp to 21C, engine turns off ago.

    This is on regular Prius, not PIP, partially warmed up.
     
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  16. Flash287

    Flash287 Junior Member

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  17. eman08

    eman08 Active Member

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    I have the 2nd gen Prius and it's normal for the ICE to run longer as the traction battery is less efficient and the ICE is so cold that it needs to warm up to its operative temperature. I see 8 green bars every day for the traction battery and even had all 9 green bars as it's around 30-40 degrees here and lowest 27 degrees at night time.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  18. Flash287

    Flash287 Junior Member

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    My 2016 was bought in NJ back in May. Now on my 5th tankful. On every tank fill I was averaging about 62 MPG. But I now notice a 8% drop in mpg since we have cold weather (35F and windy all day). On my present tankful of about 250 miles, am averaging only 57 MPG. I think i can explain why.

    I had a 2011 for 5 years. What I learned with the 2011, it is normal in cold weather for the MPG drop.
    The reason is for Toyota to meet emissions, the ICE must reach operating temperatures asap. The coolant temperature is used to determine how much EV versus ICE is employed.

    If starting off very cold, your MPG will drop because the EV mode will be precluded until the coolant reaches proper temperatures. Further, if you are naturally calling for cabin heat, it takes the heat out of the coolant. So the colder it gets the more heat is extracted from the coolant. So the ICE runs more. And because of the cabin heater is in use further ectracting heat from the coolant in the cold weather. Therefore the ICE runs on average more in winter than in summer.

    One neat feature on the 2016 that my 2011 did not have is an automatic damper control to help speed up and maintain adequate coolant temperature. It's a motor driven baffle that variably blocks incoming air to the radiator. So warm up is faster. Notice during summer days, you can start off and if the SOC is OK, you will be immediately driving off in EV mode. That no longer happens in cold weather.

    If you give up some creature comfort and turn off the cabin heaters for the first 10 minutes, Your MPG will pick up again.

    Another consideration is the ICE is very efficient. On average for example, at 60 MPH and getting 60 MPG, means you are only using 1/60th of a gallon of gas each minute(2.1 oz).. A gallon is 128 oz. So at 60 mph, you are only burning 2.1 ounces of gas per minute. So you are moving a 3000 lb vehicle 90 feet every second. So again, all the heat generated only comes from the gas burned. The Prius is a gas sipper. So if it is hardly burning gas its is hardly making heat. On the other hand if you had a big clunker getting 15 mpg, you have lots of waste heat. On cold days use your electric seat heater for the first 5 minutes. Some folks in very cold areas use an engine block heater to keep oil and coolant warm. so at start off you will get the same MPG as if it were summer. But in 20F weather, required cabin heat will again bite into the MPG. Make sure your tires have the right pressure. in cold weather the air pressure drops in the tire raising rolling resistance. On my 17" wheels, I run 34 in the front and 33 in the rear. 1 MPG over the recommends.
     
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  19. GT4Prius

    GT4Prius Active Member

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    Prius 2016 engine is about 40% efficient, Toyota say. So the other 60% of the energy is given off as heat.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.