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Advice on gen 4 engine into gen 3

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Main Forum' started by robomoto, Dec 20, 2021.

  1. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Revert it to 3rd gen EGR? Hopefully wouldn’t stress the exhaust manifold connector pipe too much.
     
  2. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Right. The P0403 code is detected when the ECM sees that its electrical connection to the valve is open or shorted. The code does not wait for a second trip to confirm; it is reported right away.

    Right again. When "re-pinned", you have not opened or shorted the ECM's electrical connection to the valve. You have just rearranged it so that none of the ECM's signals will ever move the valve, and done that in a way the ECM can't directly detect. (There is no movement or position sensor on the valve to give the ECM that information.)

    When the ECM knows of an EGR problem (that is, when it has reported a P0401 or P0403 code and the CEL is showing), the ECM then makes fail-safe adjustments to engine parameters like ignition timing in order to mechanically protect the engine. You can find this information in the "fail-safe chart" in the "SFI system" section of the repair manual.

    The other EGR-related code that can be set is the P0401. That is detected by a self test monitor that the ECM occasionally runs. Some time during normal driving, when the engine is warm and you happen to be decelerating with the fuel cut, the ECM will sneak the test in, which is to open the valve some and watch the manifold absolute pressure sensor to see the reading increase. Because that's a real test for actual flow, your re-pinning will not fool it. But that code will not be set until the right conditions have occurred for the ECM to run the test, and it has to have run the test in two different trips and failed both before it will set the code. (And of course if you clear the code, then all of that has to happen again before it will come back.)

    So you don't see that one right away, and in the meantime, the ECM does not know the EGR isn't working, and does not make the engine-protecting adjustments.
     
    #42 ChapmanF, Dec 31, 2021
    Last edited: Dec 31, 2021
  3. robomoto

    robomoto Member

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    @ChapmanF amazing.

    I'm going to restore the pins and put a sheet metal plate with a restrictive hole in it in between the EGR valve and its connecting pipe to limit the EGR flow.

    I'm also going to test different sized holes, with the goal of using the largest hole that doesn't cause misfire-like effects. Since the gen 4 EGR is reportedly feeding too much exhaust gas into the intake causing misfires, I need to reduce the EG recirculation while providing as much of it as possible to cool the engine without making it run poorly.

    However, until this test is complete, for normal driving, I'll have to keep the EGR connector disconnected in order for the engine to adjust to having no exhaust gas recirculated and drive as gently as possible. Because there's a big difference between having the pins rearranged (an EGR delete without ECM adjustments) and having the EGR disconnected (an EGR delete with ECM adjustments).

    Is this reasoning sound?
     
    #43 robomoto, Dec 31, 2021
    Last edited: Dec 31, 2021
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  4. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The reasoning is sound as far as it goes, but I am not sure it won't run into difficulties with the math.

    The right amount of EGR to be let into the engine is something calculated by the ECM for different conditions of speed and load, according to a curve programmed into it at the factory. It's possible that with the ECM's existing programmed curve combined with some size of hole in a plate, you could come somewhere close to the right EGR flow over the whole range of driving conditions.

    But it's also possible that doesn't work out, and it turns out that the math governing flow through a hole in a plate just isn't a good-enough match for the math giving the right amount of EGR over the operating range.

    I am not enough of a fluid dynamics geek to know the answers myself. I can only reiterate what I said above, that I've been watching threads about this for a while, and I still haven't seen one that ends with "and now I'm happy how the engine runs."
     
  5. robomoto

    robomoto Member

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    Well, with the way this engine swap unfolded, I'm left to make the best of it by feeding at least some EG back into the intake. Currently, we know the engine runs well with an EGR delete. If I wasn't worried about higher peak combustion temps, I'd leave it at that. However, this is still mostly the same Prius engine of the previous generation. The head has been upgraded, but I wouldn't feel comfortable taking the EGR system out of the equation completely. If I can verify that at least some exhaust gas is being recirculated while getting the engine to run smoothly, then you would have your story that ends with "and now I'm happy how the engine runs."

    But hindsight is 20/20. I now know that a gen 3 EGR retrofit is a must for a gen 4 engine into a gen 3 chassis swap.
     
    #45 robomoto, Dec 31, 2021
    Last edited: Dec 31, 2021
  6. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    What happened to your old Gen 3 EGR parts? Off to the scrap heap?
     
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  7. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    I believe its more than the amount of gas, the composition is different as well since the gen3 intakes prior to the catalytic converter.
     
  8. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Right, the papers on "catalyzed EGR" (the system adopted for Gen 4) also talk about some different combustion chemistry effects because the source is after the catalyst and the ingredients have changed.

    But the upsizing of the Gen 4 components to account for the lower pressure is obvious enough that people notice just by looking (and then it's surprising how many will say something like "oh, obviously Gen 3 had a design defect and was too small, and they fixed it by making Gen 4's plumbing bigger").

    In any event, once you have a Gen 4 to Gen 3 swap, and the exhaust is coming from ahead of the cat from the normal Gen 3 place, the chemical composition is the same as what the Gen 3 ECM expects. Now if you could just get the volume flow to match what the Gen 3 ECM expects—everywhere on the curve—you could probably call it a day.
     
  9. robomoto

    robomoto Member

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    It's still at the shop on the old engine. I told them I'd be coming back to get the engine or just the EGR. But to put that EGR on my new engine now would probably be too much work. Either the engine has to come back out or you try to torch the pipes with the engine in the bay without burning the car down (yeah right). Better to try to get this gen 4 EGR to work.
     
  10. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    An unbent exhaust manifold would be less than $180 at toyotapartsdeal, maybe well under $100 at a recycler.

    Or with the cowl out of the way and some shielding draped around, re-bending the one you've got in place might not be as big a deal as it sounds.
     
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  11. robomoto

    robomoto Member

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    Problem solved: Created an EGR restriction gasket from 4 layers of tin foil (1 piece folded twice) with holes created with a leather belt hole puncher. Easily installed it right at the EGR-to-intake manifold connection - a 10 minute fix. No more hesitation or roughness from excessive EGR flow. The only problem might be the long term consequences from the engine not receiving the EXACT amount of EGR it was designed to get. However, an interesting observation: before the restriction hack, I test drove the car again with unrestricted gen 4 EGR with the original pin orientation and the engine roughness seemed like it was greatly reduced from before. My guess is that the system somehow adjusted itself to new EGR parameters or the engine needed some wearing in after being out of operation for some time? Not sure.

    I might try another gasket with smaller holes to see if it runs smoother, but so far I am happy with how my engine runs.

    upload_2022-1-4_17-6-16.jpeg upload_2022-1-4_17-6-40.jpeg
    upload_2022-1-4_17-21-40.jpeg

    I also tried this one-hole gasket before the 5-hole one, and upon removal, the condensation on it (the EGR side) seems to indicate the EGR valve is functioning because I could feel there was a lot of steam in the exhaust gases coming out of the muffler in this snowy weather.
    upload_2022-1-4_17-19-36.jpeg
     

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    #51 robomoto, Jan 4, 2022
    Last edited: Jan 4, 2022
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  12. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Neat!

    For your next experiment, you might pull your EGR flow numbers after a bit and see what it's saying.

    The number is actually a "pressure" number; the test is, the car measures how much the manifold pressure goes up when the EGR valve is opened some during deceleration.

    We haven't got definitive knowledge about how good or bad a particular range of numbers might be, but mine has been around 21 kPa since I cleaned it in the summer. (It was around ten point something before cleaning.)

    There is another test that is more hands-on (the ECM's pressure test is all automatic, all you do is ask it what the most recent result was).

    The hands-on version is where you have the engine idling and use Techstream to command the valve open by steps. The valve has about 110 steps to full open. At idle, stock and unclogged, it seems typical you don't get beyond the 14th step or so before the engine is noticeably rough, and only a few steps past that it's about to stall. Systems with too much restriction, you can open the valve further steps than that.

    There's some more information about that technique in this post and thereabouts.
     
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  13. xliderider

    xliderider Senior Member

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  14. mjoo

    mjoo Senior Member

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    I think aluminum foil would eventually oxidize and fall apart. Try a steel sheet metal gasket?

    moto g power ?
     
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  15. robomoto

    robomoto Member

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    Good to know. I'll monitor it periodically to check the condition and replace it accordingly. Thanks.
    Good idea. Maybe I'll invest in a Techstream subscription one of these days. Thanks for the awesome intel.
     
    #55 robomoto, Jan 4, 2022
    Last edited: Jan 4, 2022
  16. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Plenty of people using non-Techstream options to pull up the automated test results ... anything that can do a "mode 6" monitor results query. Lots of the usual-suspect phone apps etc.
     
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  17. Prii_Ownr

    Prii_Ownr Junior Member

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    Anybody notice the following modifications done to the gen 4 engine by this shop (Hybrid 911 in the two part YouTube video series):

    - Replaced the 4th gen goose neck coolant outlet with a straight pipe outlet - same as gen 3.
    - Installed the temp sensor on the gen 4 head in the same location as the gen 3 head. Did they drill and tap a new hole for this?
    - Installed a straight pipe on the gen 4 head in the same location as the gen 3 head. This is for the coolant hose that goes to the bottom (inlet) port of the heater core. Did they drill a new hole here?

    Has anyone done this when swapping gen 4 engine to gen 3 Prius? @RightOnTime Do you do this as well at your shop? I understand it makes it plug and play for the gen 3 but how reliable are these modifications?

    @Ragingfit Did you consider these modifications when performing your swap?
     
  18. Ragingfit

    Ragingfit Active Member

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    I looked at the systems, how they would change and what I needed to do to restore them to functional.
    I wanted my old "car" to see it's old engine, so the old stuff had to go on the new engine.
    Specifically, Intake, MAP and throttle body, EGR and EGR cooler, Exhaust - manifold, cat, and all, and to hook up the new sensors, knock, cam position, oil pressure, coolant temp all compatible.
    Easy work. Very few modifications and almost no issues.
    Put the 3rd gen stuff on the 4th gen engine.
    On the video, I'm not sure how they accomplished the re-plumbing of the head. They are clearly using 4th gen engine and had to cut the mount for the EGR cooler.
    Too much work for me. I used an 8" long 1" pipe from home depot and added a pex T.



    - Fix That Prius !!!
     
  19. Prius_10_inside

    Prius_10_inside Junior Member

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    Quick question: can anyone suggest if there are ANY Gen4 Hoses from the Gen 4 Engine that can be brought over, and likely fit better in the Gen 3 engine compartment ? I have an G4 engine with alot of cut Gen 4 hoses. I thought I remember reading that one or two of the Gen4 hoses should be kept and fit better in the Gen 3 engine compartment . Any insight? I’m planning on staying with the G3 EGR valve and “cooler”.
     
  20. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Have you watched the @Ragingfit video series (pinned in Prius v Accessories forum)? He utilizes some left over hoses, has good strategy I think. It's his second time 'round.