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Massive Coolant Leak!!! Please help. (Now $4,000 Engine Repair!!!). Fixed! (Post #48)

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by Priski, Sep 26, 2023.

  1. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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  2. Priski

    Priski Junior Member

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    I have a question, so I am going to drop a whole new engine in. However, I need to save up money first. Am I damaging the transmission or other parts besides the engine by doing local diving? No more than 15 miles at a time and not going over 60 mph! Thanks
     
  3. Priski

    Priski Junior Member

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    Is there one you recommend me buy? Thank you!
     
  4. Brian1954

    Brian1954 Active Member

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    If you are using an android phone or tablet, you can use the Veepeak Mini Bluetooth OBD II Scanner for Android ONLY which is $14 on Amazon, and an app like Torque, or Car Scanner ELM OBD2, or Hybrid Assistant to monitor the engine coolant temperature.

    A different option is to buy a display unit, which plugs into the OBD2 port on your car, to monitor the engine coolant temperature. The one I bought was recommended by rjparker. It is sometime referred as a P10 display unit.
    Here is one listed on eBay for $33. 218445_Prius_P10_Scanner.jpg
     
    #44 Brian1954, Oct 14, 2023
    Last edited: Oct 14, 2023
  5. Priski

    Priski Junior Member

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    Thank you so much!
     
  6. ColoradoBoo

    ColoradoBoo Senior Member

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    That's a great tip for monitoring coolant temps. I love my coolant temp display in my 2014 Tundra and don't understand why Toyota wouldn't have it in ALL vehicles with ICE engines.
     
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  7. ttou68

    ttou68 Active Member

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    #1. Are you sure the head gasket is leaking coolant?

    #2. Coolant pump is likely bad, but it's not over $250 when order online from a Toyota dealership. And a fairly easy job to DIY...

    I did not read where your car has roung start, so you might be able to drive your car for a while after replacing coolant pump.. because head gasket may or may not be an issue..

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
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  8. Priski

    Priski Junior Member

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    I was told I need a head gasket repair because of my engine over heating. It turned out it was only a bad water pump which I diagnosed with my friend mechanic after a shop quoted me an astronomical $4000 bill! I will be asking for a refund for my diagnostic charge. If they refuse I will post the estimate. Watch out for crooks! Car is running great again. It broke my heart when I thought I need an engine replacement as I bought this car for its reliability. Thanks to all of you guys who help me with this problem. I truly apperciate and look forward to giving back to the platform.
     
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  9. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Well first off I wouldn't get carried away with the water pump replacement is being the end-all be-all I forgot what your mileage is but this engine is known for overheating and head gasket problems but that's usually starts with rattling at startup and then more when driving as it gets worse but anyway I'm glad you for now have solved your problem with a water pump just beware and be proactive that this head gasket issue is quite normal in this vehicle at certain types of mileages I've had two of them so I have a little bit of an idea of how it will go. Do you have your old water pump does the impeller spin freely when you spin it just curious if you take the four bolts and take the backing plate off and lift the impeller out Is it all chewed up plastic? Which is kind of things you want to know with this particular model. But maybe the pump has been left where it was removed so on and so forth can't be looked at now who knows.
     
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  10. Brian1954

    Brian1954 Active Member

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    Did you replace the engine water pump yourself, or did you pay a mechanic to do it?

    What engine water pump did you buy? OEM or aftermarket?

    Did you use new coolant, or did you reuse the old coolant?
     
  11. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    It usually goes like this

    Failed water pump
    Overheated engine
    Blown head gasket
    Coolant leaks out

    a failed water pump usually would not cause your coolant to leak out. It may only seep out a bit, So you might have just put a band aid to fix your issue in replacing the water pump
     
    #51 JC91006, Dec 25, 2023
    Last edited: Dec 25, 2023
  12. Priski

    Priski Junior Member

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    I bought a water pump from aisin for $200. Did the repair myself. Dumped all the old coolant and added new coolant.

    No, checked my oil and had my friend examine the car. No coolant is going into the engine at all. The coolant leaked because the pump was working on and off. On the road trip the coolant reservoir top cap opened and let coolant spray out. Its some kind of design when the coolant has too much pressure or something I was told. Pretty accurate as from that trip I have lost no coolant!

    I would agree with you except all of those symptoms are gone! We never had any of those problems to show a gasket issue besides on the road trip a bunch of coolant left the system. However, we realized how it left the system and why! We are lucky we caught the issue in time. Car has never been smoother!!

    I wish I could post the video i have. We did a comparison, the old water pump was so hard to turn the spinning thing in the center. The new one, I could do with my pinkie! This was definitely the problem.
     
    #52 Priski, Dec 26, 2023
    Last edited by a moderator: Dec 29, 2023
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  13. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Yes that was a bad impeller apparently now we can buy the impeller for the water pumps on Amazon or eBay for like $35 then if you to undone the four bolts or you can remove the impeller It's just a magnet like a washing machine impeller a mag drive type impeller The plastic swells up from the heat of the coolant or overheating coolant what have you splits the plastic makes it hard to turn replace the impeller plug the pump up before you even bolt it to the car boot the car watch the pump turn call up the speeds from tech if you like see it work bolt it back on off you go maybe you saved it because some of the cheap imitation water pumps will fail very quickly and if you have your old one you can just put an impeller back in it if that should happen and maybe be good for a while It seems the electronics in the seconds or lesser made water pumps just aren't up to snuff apparently they look good but they don't work well.
     
  14. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Has the miles on the car been mentioned?

    EGR and intake manifold ever been thoroughly/completely cleaned? If so at what miles?

    My 2 cents, if it's a gen 3 with 150K+, and the aforementioned cleaning was only recently done, or half-@ss done, you're in a fool's paradise to think the water pump is your only problem.

    BTW, with head gasket failure coolant does not typically leak into oil; it leaks into combustion chambers, typically cylinder one or two, leaking at the adjoining wall.

    (Damn, 'nother case of OP starting a new thread, continuation of the other thread he started. I've reported, @Tideland Prius may merge this one.)
     
    #54 Mendel Leisk, Dec 26, 2023
    Last edited: Dec 26, 2023
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  15. Brian1954

    Brian1954 Active Member

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    I do not agree with your order of events. Based on reading many Gen 3 engine overheating problems in this forum over the past 3 years, I have concluded the following order:

    1. The engine coolant pump begins to fail. The white plastic which covers the magnet on the end of the impeller splits. This causes drag and the impeller can not spin at the speed that is requested from the ECU. The flow of coolant through the pump is not high enough to cool the engine.
    2. The engine overheats and the "High coolant temperature warning light" will come on if the sensor detects the coolant gets to 120C (248F).
    3. Pressure builds up in the cooling system and coolant is pushed past the cap on top of the reservoir.

    The overheating of the engine will occur during periods of high throttle usage, like highway driving more the 60 MPH, driving up a hill or mountain, etc. Sometime you will get a trouble code P261B and sometimes you will not get the trouble code.

    There are also other failure modes for the water pump besides what I wrote in #1 above, but an overheating engine can force the coolant out of the reservoir without having a bad head gasket.

    If the problem is detected early enough (before the engine severely overheats), I believe that you can replace the water pump and you will not have a problem with the head gasket. Most times the problem is NOT detected in time and the engine severely overheats which will lead to a head gasket failure. Only time will tell if the OP replaced the water pump in time.

    I believe that the high occurrence of head gasket failures in a Gen 3 are caused by bad water pumps and overheating of the engine. So, I have been monitoring my engine coolant temperature staring 2 years ago. I now have 140k miles on my 2011 Prius, and I hope that I can detect that the water pump is starting to fail before I overheat the engine. Below is what I wrote on the OP's previous thread:
     
    #55 Brian1954, Dec 26, 2023
    Last edited: Dec 26, 2023
  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    The water pumps are failing, but they aren’t the only culprit. I don’t think the engineers anticipated EGR passages choked with carbon.
     
    #56 Mendel Leisk, Dec 26, 2023
    Last edited: Dec 26, 2023
  17. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    You may be right about the pressure building up but not sure I'm convinced this is not a failed head gasket case.

    If you are at 140k miles on your car, you should replace the water pump and not worry about it failing. This replacement is normally a 1 time replacement for most owners. I don't see many owners going to 300k with their car, so a second replacement is probably not going to happen. So it is better to do it early, since it is going to require 1 time, either now or a risky later time. Also these temperature readings you're looking at is from 1 place of the engine, the place where the sensor is at. The variable speed water pump does not do a good job since the engine temperature may be hotter in different areas of the engine and the water pump is not operating at a speed that will cool the hotter parts.
     
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  18. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    *Threads merged*
     
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  19. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    This.
     
  20. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    It sounds like you bought a genuine pump at $200. There are counterfeits that fail in a few months.

    Don’t get too emotional invested in a gen3. She will break your heart again and again. She is “high maintenance” as we used to say in the dating world. Keep throwing money at her and her shapely body will keep you coming back for more.

     
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