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2016 and 2017 Li-Ion Battery Longevity

Discussion in 'Gen 4 Prius Main Forum' started by ben_08, Oct 18, 2023.

  1. ben_08

    ben_08 New Member

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    Good afternoon All!

    Wanted to check in on those who have a 2016/2017 Prius with the Li-ion battery to see how well it has held up over the years. Still getting good MPGs after the 7-9 years on the battery? I know Toyota has been shifting to more Li-Ion on their hybrids and was wondering how these batteries are holding up compared to the tried and true NiMH battery. Look forward to hearing back!
     
  2. kevinwhite

    kevinwhite Active Member

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    I recently sold my > 6 year old 2017 gen 4 Prius 4 with about 20k miles. It had a Li-Ion battery.

    There hadn't been any noticeable change in fuel consumption or battery charge/discharge behavior.

    I was wondering about how the battery would fare as the Li-Ion battery is not much more than 50% of the capacity of the NiMH one (750Wh vs ~1300Wh), so it will probably cycle more.

    kw
     
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  3. Drakxyfly

    Drakxyfly Junior Member

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    li-ion batteries last about five time longer than NIMH. NIMH isn't tried and true it's old and worn, (Toyota is very resistant to change and still hasn't fully invested in electric) but it is still used in the AWD Prius because it has better cold weather chemistry than Li-ion so.......
     
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  4. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    My 2016 had the LiOn battery pack. It performed well until 2020 when a kamikaze deer totaled it. My 2020 AWDe has the older NiMh battery pack and it, as I expected, is still doing fine.

    I previously had a 2004 Prius with the NiMh battery pack. The pack lasted 195k miles (9 years) and only one module failed at that time with one bad cell. A commercially rebuilt battery was still operating well at 12 years and 280,000 miles.

    LiOn batteries can handle 200-500 full discharge/charge cycles before weakening to 80% capacity. In a Prius HSD, this should easily allow for a 10 year, 150k mile useful life, but the older NiMh batteries have proven that they perform well.

    If you really want to have a reliable, long-lived hybrid battery system, use LiFeSo4 batteries which can handle 10 times the discharge/charge cycles (2000-5000) than the LiOn batteries.

    JeffD
     
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  5. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    my 11 year old lion battery hasn't lost much capacity. i suspect the prime battery will outlast the car
     
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  6. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    It is interesting to note that EV makers are using LiFeSo4 Batteries as the lower cost (lower range) option. The battery packs with a higher KWH spec are LiOn.

    JeffD
     
  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    is that tesla?
     
  8. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    Yes, but they're not alone. Toyota's EV plans for 2006 are similar.

    JeffD
     
  9. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    is it also because the chemistry qualifies for the tax credit?
     
  10. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    The only mineral that is relevant is that LiFeSo4 batteries do not contain cobalt.

    JeffD
     
  11. Drakxyfly

    Drakxyfly Junior Member

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  12. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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  13. Drakxyfly

    Drakxyfly Junior Member

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    Sorry but again completely disagree. It's been widely published that Toyota has not fully invested in EVs, and 2027 is basically three years from now so that is not long term(especially since they just start real world tests of these solid state batteries). They are still spending money researching and developing hydrogen and alternative fuel sources, as well as spending the last three years developing a new type of automatic racing transmission the DAT for the new GR cars and racing applications. Maybe from a perspective of what type of battery cells they are using they have a similar plan, but overall Toyota is much more diversified than that for the future and hasn't really committed to one single strategy yet.
     
  14. Mr.MPG

    Mr.MPG Member

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    Mine is 2016 Prius Four Touring bought March 2016, still getting 75MPG in ECO mode, been it that mode since day one. I have replaced 12V battery in 2020 and new set of tires this year. So far, no loss of mileage or anything hope my Hybrid pack it will last till 200K.

    Cheers.
    MrMPG
     
  15. kevinwhite

    kevinwhite Active Member

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    Surely you meant LiFePO4? (Phosphate not sulphate).

    kevin
     
  16. jdenenberg

    jdenenberg EE Professor

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    You are correct.

    JeffD
     
  17. sylvaing

    sylvaing Active Member

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    My 2017 Prime still did 42 km per charge with my summer tires last summer. Winter tires at mild temperatures drops this to 36 km. Next week, I'm putting back my summer tires. I'll see if the range has remained 42 km from last year with these tires.