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Is this a money pit, or a keeper?

Discussion in 'Prius v Technical Discussion' started by Sue Ruales, Sep 28, 2019.

  1. Leadfoot J. McCoalroller

    Leadfoot J. McCoalroller Senior Member

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    If you haven’t already found them, try LKQ for a used engine. It’s a national chain deal.

    Also there is car-part.com, which is a search engine for lots of smalltime junkyards. Their search engine is excellent but the actual recyclers selling the parts are the usual spectrum of good to bad, so apply instincts.
     
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  2. Tim Jones

    Tim Jones Senior Member

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    One thing to remember this car will need a New Traction Battery in the next year or two...... (most likely)
    and if you get a new engine make sure the complete EGR System is cleaned valve and exhaust cooler system.
    Probably better put in a new engine water pump and inverter coolant pump also if your going to keep it.
     
    #42 Tim Jones, Nov 10, 2019
    Last edited: Nov 10, 2019
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  3. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    I’ll make note of that and ask Toyota to make sure the egr system etc is serviced.
     
  4. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    I am going to want to sell the car right away.......how do I present the car to potential buyers with a replaced engine offered for sale immediately after the service has been completed?

    How do I need to price it? Is it worth less than with the original engine, and the biggest, and most important question, is do I need to stay away from hybrids altogether, and why?
     
  5. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    All that really needs doing is cleaning, but that is labour intensive, lots of hours, the dealership service department is likely clueless about the techniques, and the best they will offer is parts replacement with new The EGR cooler and valve are around $250 apiece (new) and a new intake manifold also about that amount. Labour shouldn't be bad, really nothing if it's done in conjunction with an engine swap.

    Still, with a little knowledge and patience, it's a virtually free DIY to clean those parts. Some info:

    The simplest way to see where you're at, is to check the degree of carbon build up in the EGR pipe, a stainless steel connecting pipe between the EGR valve and intake manifold. Watch @NutzAboutBolts video #16 here:

    Nutz About Bolts Prius Maintenance Videos | PriusChat

    Two or three other videos linked there too, for the full cleaning of the intake manifold, full EGR clean, and Oil Catch Can install.

    Good thread:

    EGR & Intake Manifold Clean Results | PriusChat

    Another:

    Oil Catch Can, Eliminate that knock! | PriusChat

    Some tools worth having:

    E8 Torx socket (mandatory)
    E6 Torx socket (optional, but good to have, to remove the throttle body studs from intake manifold)
    3/8" ratchet wrench, regular and long handle, flex head, you can never have enough (or 1/2 plus reducer)
    1/4" ratchet wrench, or 3/8" to 1/4" reducer
    Ratchet extensions: you can never have enough
    Long needle nose piers, straight and bent tip
    Ratcheting 12mm box wrench (optional, but makes disconnection of the EGR cooler from exhaust easier)
    Torque wrench (3/8" and 1/4" both good to have)
    Floor jack and safety stands (or ramps): basically some method to raise front, if you need to take underpanel off, which you may need to, both for access and to recover dropped items.
     
    #45 Mendel Leisk, Nov 10, 2019
    Last edited: Nov 10, 2019
  6. Leadfoot J. McCoalroller

    Leadfoot J. McCoalroller Senior Member

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    OK, here’s my take on that. Please keep in mind you’re just reading some relatively subjective opinions by one guy on the Internet.

    Every buyer has different attitudes and perspectives. Some won’t notice or care about the engine replacement. So the simple fact that it will have been replaced isn’t significant to the pricing of the car.

    If I add the data point that the engine was replaced yesterday? That reduces the value in my mind, because in a buyer’s position I would want to know that the repair was at least initially successful. Generally speaking if an engine transplant goes a few weeks/1500 miles, it’s going to stay good (given appropriate maintenance) for the remaining expected life of the car.

    Assuming that you don’t want to deceive the buyer but want the car gone fast, you could list it without detailing the repair. Don’t hide it, answer truthfully when potential buyers ask… but you might be surprised by how many people don’t even ask. The used car market is on fire lately, prices are up and it’s especially overheated in the sub-$10k range. This means that you can put a relatively high price on yours.

    Personally I like bargaining. I’d price it high and strike on a buyer offering within 70%. They’ll feel like they’re saving a pile and that momentum can carry the whole deal.

    Your more general question about hybrids? My opinion (strictly from a financial standpoint) is that hybrids are only worthwhile when gasoline is expensive, and that right now gas is too cheap for a hybrid to save you any money.

    New ones are wonderful and reliable- we really enjoy ours, but with fuel so cheap we’ll never earn back the extra cost vs. a similar gas car. A 4-year old hybrid might be cheap enough to make the math work, and wouldn’t be much risk in terms of expensive repairs. A 10-year old hybrid will be cheaper still, but is more likely to present significant repair costs.

    The big problem is that those 4 and 10 year olds aren’t cheaper-enough due to the overheated used car market.
     
    #46 Leadfoot J. McCoalroller, Nov 10, 2019
    Last edited: Nov 10, 2019
  7. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    Thank you for your honesty, and information. It makes sense to drive the car for awhile to show the replacement “took” before I put it on the market.

    I bought the Prius for the mpg’s only. I drive an avg of 75 miles per day, and I’ve always believed Toyota’s last forever....well over 200,000 miles. I researched other vehicles, but none came close to the Prius.

    I obviously made many nice person-umptions about this car, and the last thing I assumed would go wrong was the engine.

    thanks again for your info, it was very helpful.
     
  8. Leadfoot J. McCoalroller

    Leadfoot J. McCoalroller Senior Member

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    Your experience is clearly in lottery ticket territory. Buy a hybrid and the gas engine blows up. Yep, that’s odd. Now, from other details you’ve shared I suspect that this particular car was substantially abused prior to your ownership, and I think selling it is the right move.

    You could truthfully say that you bought it with a bad engine and then paid to fix it up before selling it. Lots of people do that. You don’t need to tell anyone that you didn’t actually profit off of the deal, or that you hadn’t planned it this way.

    Our other car is an old Hyundai Accent. Driven the right way, I can get 45MPG out of that car; not a lot worse than our Prius. The difference is that I can go get another one for about $2k. It’s not as nice as our Prius, but incredibly cheap to operate.
     
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  9. Tim Jones

    Tim Jones Senior Member

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    Excellent Post......!
     
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  10. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    Hi everyone!

    First, thanks for all the time and information you all provided with my Prius.

    Second, the original dealership stopped resounding, but because I have a lawyer for my car accident, I message them to let them know what happened. Usually, they get back to me within the hour, but I haven’t heard anything back. Fingers crossed.

    I plan to picket in front of the dealership to put pressure on them, and to let prospective customers know the type of people they’re dealing with.

    I wrote reviews on all of their social media platforms, and in their website.

    At the end, I had to buy a new car. I ended up a 2014 Prius v three, 54000 miles, full warranty, and a payment I didn’t want, and can’t afford. It’s $256/72months.

    I plan to pay the balance, once I get the rest of the insurance money.

    Thanks again m,

    Sue
     
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  11. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Likely spell-check gone awry, but I like it: wack 'em like a bell. (y)
     
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  12. Tim Jones

    Tim Jones Senior Member

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    Just make sure the car has any recalls up to date...........
     
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  13. kens97uber171

    kens97uber171 Active Member

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    I'm kind of curious about all the comments on a 2014 Prius V with 150,000 miles being a money pit in the short future.

    Are the third-generation engines really that bad?

    I had heard the other way around that they were pretty good engines.

    I've got a 2008 with 311000 on it and it runs flawlessly.

    I'd be curious to find out on her engine what the hell went wrong with it to threw a rod.

    And I also want to know how is it that if there was something bad enough mechanically to throw a rod that the dealer didn't hear a problem or detect a problem when they did their check over the vehicle.
    Seems to me there would be some liability on them they inspected the vehicle and said it was fine and then it blew up. I realize it's not the dealer that you bought it from but I would think there'd be some responsibility on the inspection results.

    I agree with the rest of you however that if I came across a car with all of those codes I would probably have run away. Especially if j was NOT mechanically minded...
    Those codes are there for a reason and who the hell knows what it is.

    Good luck to the OP...

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
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  14. telmo744

    telmo744 HSD fanatic

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    Maybe this event had something to do with (probable) disregard of the engine oil level by the previous owner. After the red light flashed, threw some oil in but the damage had already ocurred.
    These 1.8 engines do consume some oil past 75k, mine @ 130k miles I have to add 0,5 liter between 9k miles service.
     
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  15. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    Lol......autocorrect thinks it knows better than me.
     
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  16. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    It seems like the previous owner didn’t mechanically maintain the car, but the car was in pristine physical condition. I just assumed she did. I would never have purchased a car with that many miles from anyone other than Totota, maybe, Honda, and I would never have purchased it if I knew it wasn’t maintained. The CarFax shows it was maintained, but who knows what happened when she didn’t take it to a dealership for servicing.

    Sadly, I had to break down and buy another one...except, now I have payments and that really irks me. I haven’t had a car payment in years. They made a little extra on me because at the end I loaded up with protection. I paid $900 for GAP (because people like to rear end me), I paid $900 for a maintenance plan (every 6 months mandatory inspection, and they’ll cover any and all maintenance), and $1500 for bumper to bumper to bumper to bumper coverage. 7/100,000...as long as I maintain the service schedule through a dealership.
     
  17. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    Thanks for the good luck vibes.....I’m sure my new Prius will be good....I think I bought every warranty package they sell.

    I agree about Toyota not doing so,thing about the engine, but I’m told it would have been no one could see coming.

    The initial list of codes popped, while I was getting the inspection about buying the car. Once, they did the update, the codes disappeared. I had my son double check it for me, and the6 we’re gone.

    After that “clean bill of health” on the car, I figured I was golden.

    My ex brother in law was a car salesman, who moved up to manager, and then, regional manager and so on, so I know how to buy a used car. I know what to look for, and I know everything they’ll say to make the sales. I did EVERYTHING, but still got ******.
     
  18. Sue Ruales

    Sue Ruales New Member

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    It needed the engine overheat update, and after that was done, the codes disappeared. It’s the ONLY reason I ended up buying it.

    So, I no longer own that car. After 14 days in my no charge loaner from Toyota, I broke down and bought another Prius v. Same year, but different trim (3...I had a 2).

    I am BEYOND annoyed and frustrated because now, I have a car payment...nice and high too.
     
  19. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    make sure you get the egr circuit cleaned on the new one. all the best!(y)
     
  20. Tim Jones

    Tim Jones Senior Member

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    Yikes..................
     
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