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Looking for advice on 2012 Prius V ownership at high KM

Discussion in 'Prius v Main Forum' started by benstpierre, Mar 15, 2023.

  1. benstpierre

    benstpierre Junior Member

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    We bought a 2012 Prius V for a great price through a private sale in 2016. We paid $12,500 CAD for it with 138,000 km on the odometer. Fast forward to 2023, and the car has had no issues at 293,000 km.

    We have had all maintenance done at the local Toyota dealer. All it has needed is fluid, filters, brakes, tires, two replacement oil pressure senders (it leaked twice in the last three years), and a sway bar link.

    About a week ago, the car started with a very rough idle one morning, which shook the car. This happened once and never again.

    This rough start scares me because I had a different Prius V back in 2020 (I tried to buy a second one since the first was so good). The second Prius V had this shaking start/misfire/rough idle a few days after I bought it, and it continued until I eventually sold it at a loss a month later. Before I sold that Prius at a significant loss, the dealer told me they thought it needed a new engine but were not sure.

    However, my trusty Prius V (the one we have owned since 2016) has only done this once and only for about 4 seconds. I have driven it maybe 50 times since and never experienced it again.

    That being said, what should I be watching out for as my car approaches the 300,000 km mark? Used car prices are very high right now. The Prius V is nearly impossible to buy, and we love our current one. I have heard they can reach very high mileage if well-maintained. I change the oil every 7,000 km and do pretty much whatever the dealer recommends. Some people have mentioned cleaning the EGR, throttle body, and intake manifold at high mileage. I've also heard that the 2012 model is more prone to head gasket failures.
     
  2. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    You heard right. Best solution is a quality rebuilt engine.
     
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  3. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    watch the coolant and oil levels frequently. have you cleaned the egr circuit?
     
  4. Tim Jones

    Tim Jones Senior Member

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    Your lucky.....
     
  5. benstpierre

    benstpierre Junior Member

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    I did not clean the EGR valve. Should I or is it too late? It seems to run perfectly.
     
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  6. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    it's never too late unless you're replacing the engine
     
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  7. JohnPrius3005

    JohnPrius3005 Active Member

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    Congratulations. You've had good value for the money you paid. Never fall in love with a car. Cars break and cost money to fix. And they keep breaking. Unless you are an expert Prius mechanic, or have a very close friend who is one, paying to fix problems will eat you alive. Prices are indeed insane. If you can, lease a new car, Prius or not. And sell your Prius into the insane market. The sooner you do it the more likely you are to avoid having to sell it with a known big problem. Good luck.
     
  8. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    History repeats itself with gen3 engines. You have several choices:

    1. Spend $800 for a dealer intake and egr cleanup or dig into it yourself. Not a simple job. Will not fix your early stage head gasket leak.

    2. Change plugs, coils and maybe injectors when it starts throwing misfire codes. It does not seem to lose coolant and passes a coolant hydrocarbon test. The parts cannon is the common neighborhood mechanic reaction at this point. Not cheap, another $1,000 thrown at it. You get a month or longer reprieve before you realize this was a waste.

    3. Continue waiting until the shudders are every week or so. Soon it will rattle at stop signs. Shortly after it is obvious - the coolant is low. It has been months and maybe $1800 after the first warning. The writing is on the wall. Now the repair is most likely a used engine. Some will just do the head gasket. In many cases it will fail in the near future because too much time has past. The dealer will recommend a rebuilt engine to eliminate bad rings and they will clean everything like new but the cost scares you. At this point, a rebuilt engine is the right answer for three or more years of ownership.

    Or you find a quality shop now and have the engine torn down. The cylinder head is carefully inspected, cleaned and rebuilt by a machine shop. The quality repair shop installs a new gasket set. While they are doing it the egr cooler and intake manifold are thoroughly cleaned. The shop should have enough confidence to give you a year warranty. You don't get new rings so a trade within the next couple of years should be scheduled.

    Or you trade now and punt the issue. Don't sell privately, let a dealer auction get it.
     
    #8 rjparker, Mar 21, 2023
    Last edited: Mar 21, 2023
  9. Tim Jones

    Tim Jones Senior Member

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    any prius (gen3) for sale has the HG issue..... many people out there buying used ones thinking they are getting a toy with great reliability but sady they might be getting one with the gasket already going bad.... stop leak in the car.... they just don't know it's a time bomb with a possible short fuse... huge deception on most of these being sold now..... get a ICE.............
     
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  10. slow_wagon

    slow_wagon Junior Member

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    It's possible to have a misfire without a headgasket leak. Is it consuming coolant? It's certainly worth cleaning your EGR and intake, and checking the condition of the spark plugs. Time for replacement if you have never replaced them before. If it does have a headgasket leak, call around to some independent shops and find one that is comfortable with the job. Its a very simple headgasket to change.
     
  11. pbwhat1

    pbwhat1 New Member

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    This can also be due to condensation buildup in the intake from what I have read. It frequently happens on cold mornings. My 2014 V with 100k miles does this sometimes, it's never more than a couple seconds. I have never had any coolant loss. I'm not convinced it's a head gasket issue but it is an unnerving sound.
     
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  12. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Get on EGR and intake manifold cleaning right away “may” save it. See first 2 links in my signature. On a phone turn it landscape to see signature.
     
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  13. Tim Jones

    Tim Jones Senior Member

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    Keep a close eye on the coolant level..... I had 260,000 on mine and it never rattled until the HG problem.
     
  14. benstpierre

    benstpierre Junior Member

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    I have come to the conclusion no other car on the market meets our household needs like the Prius V. Incredibly nothing else fills this gap in the market. I guess we had better take good care of it.

    The foreman at the dealer read this thread and said the following... Do my other Prius people have thoughts?:

    Hello,

    I would try performing technical service bulletin 4450 reprograming of the ECM if it has not been done.



    Some 2013 – 2015 Prius PHV, Prius and 2013 – 2016 Prius V vehicles may exhibit a vibration due to rough idle and/or tapping noise from the HV transaxle at cold start. The check engine light may also illuminate with (DTC) P0300, P0301, P0302, P0303, P0304 (Random/Multiple Cylinder Misfire Detected). The Engine Control Module/ECM (SAE Term: Powertrain Control Module/PCM) logic has been modified to reduce the possibility of this condition occurring. Follow the Repair Procedure in this bulletin to address this condition.



    Thank you,
     
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  15. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    it's always worth trying a tsb first, but since the problem is not repeatable, you won't know if it was effective or not.
    i would still consider cleaning the egr circuit
     
  16. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    A software tsb should only cost an hour's labor at most dealers. I think Toyota tried various software changes plus revised intake manifolds in an attempt to mitigate rattling. None seemed to work long term and rattling clearing quickly continued. With long durations between events. Only an egr stuck open has a chance of causing stumbling but typically not rattling.

    186,000 miles is a good run without a head gasket on a 2012 v that builds up carbon excessively and usually burns oil. Even if the oil level looks good, excessive ring blowby can dilute the oil limiting measurement of loss. If oil consumption is obvious or coolant level has a "minor" drop, things are getting serious.

    Even the inverter tsb was too little too late but at least Toyota is still covering most for 15 years. So a software fix for cold start rattling is an easy sell. Might as well try it.
     
    #16 rjparker, Apr 18, 2023
    Last edited: Apr 18, 2023
  17. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Cough syrup for lung cancer?
     
  18. PriusKoolAid

    PriusKoolAid New Member

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    Mine started rattling occasionally on cold starts this past winter. I cleaned the intake manifold, throttle body, EGR pipe (didn’t remove the valve), and replaced the PCV valve. Haven’t had any problems since. Good luck!
     
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  19. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    What’s the miles?

    Regardless, better get on the EGR valve/cooler cleaning.
     
  20. rampante550

    rampante550 Member

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    I can't speak to the throttle body, but I agree with this here and definitely go with the intake manifold, egr, and pcv valve based on my experience last year. I had a gasket leak on one cylinder, but the noise was actually from the intake manifold.

    If you (op) don't have time to clean, just buy new ones from a toyota dealer online that sells them at wholesale (there's plenty where you can get it 30-50% off) and have your service shop swap them out in one shot. You've got your money's worth out of this car and new ones are crazy expensive with high interest rates, so what's a little $ for a car that's been so great? :)