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Head gasket diagnosis

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by bkman, Jul 5, 2024.

  1. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    Hi all!

    2010 Prius with 160K miles on it.

    I’ve cleaned the intake manifold and the EGR pipe about two-three weeks ago.

    The EGR valve and the cooler: haven’t touched them yet.

    The car sat for a couple of days while I was waiting for a side glass replacement.

    I’m in Washington state, no cold startup (the lowest reading tonight was 13°C).

    Got a quick rattle this morning and three codes (no check engine light yet):
    P0300
    P0303
    P0304

    Is this what I think it is: the beginning of the head gasket failure?

    No noticeable engine coolant leak yet.
     
  2. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    A rattle means the engine misfired. There can be lots of reasons for that, so I'd be inclined to back the question up to "why did it misfire", and let the answer take me to the gasket if that's where it takes me.

    Even the members most likely to jump on any reported rattle as a sign of head gasket doom usually seem to agree that cylinders 1 or 2 are where that doom typically starts. Your misfires being in 3 and 4 might offer even more reason to take a deep breath and pursue the incident as misfiring, cause not yet determined.
     
    douglasjre and Brian1954 like this.
  3. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    BTW, I forgot to mention in the initial post that I performed EGR flow test about a month ago. Got close to normal numbers in Techstream (18-19) despite yet-to-be-cleaned intake manifold and EGR pipe.

    The only difference today was that the car sat for 2-3 nights. I usually do lots of short trips.

    I’ve driven 100 miles mostly highway since I wrote this post and haven’t heard a single misfire.

    I will try to do a radiator pressure test sooner than later - but Amazon keeps delaying my order for CTA Tools 7103 adapter- are there any alternatives that I could buy? Already got the Maddox radiator pressure test kit from HF.
     
  4. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    Well, I have a privilege of owning both 2010 Prius and 2012 Prius v.

    Just did a test with a liquid on 2010 and it doesn’t look good:

    When the same test was performed on 2012 Prius v, the liquid came the same color.

    Probably will do a pressure test just to be sure, but I desperately need an adapter for the tank.
     
  5. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Head gasket failure on 3rd Gen (and v) usually starts with coolant leaking into cylinders. That tester detects carbon monoxide in coolant, which I would speculate happens later, if at all. Try boroscope inspection first thing in the morning, looking for pooling coolant atop pistons.
     
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  6. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    I inspected all four cylinders today with the boroscope after the car has been in the garage for the entire night - nothing close to leaking coolant that I can see. Amazon finally shipped the adapter, so hopefully I can do the pressurized coolant test next weekend or so.

    I did the cylinder leak test using HF Maddox tester at TDC for every cylinder - found minimal (0.5 PSI) leak on all of them (at 70 PSI). I pulled the oil dipstick and took off the coolant radiator cap but haven't disconnected the PCV valve hose during the test.

    Found some the beginnings of cylinder wall damage on #2 and #3 - haven't really grasped what to do next.
     
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  7. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    Had anyone used oil cleaners? AMD mentions them here:
    ?

    While changing the head gasket is on the edge of my abilities (mostly at confidence level: I've cleaned the intake manifold and EGR tube two times and took cowl and spark plugs multiple times without an issue, but that's about it), taking the engine apart (even the simple one as 2ZR-FXE) is the entire different story - as a homeowner I don't have access to a lift, crane and an engine stand. And no desire of getting them for a job or two.

    I'm trying to decide what to do best now - just attempt to change the head gasket and run the cleaner in order to dissolve any existing carbon deposits inside oil tension rings or buy the updated pistons and rings and pay a mechanic to rebuild the engine.
     
  8. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Any car nuts nearby?

    There's a guy second house up the block from us, with a lift, and might have engine stand as well. I try to stay in touch with him, in case I need to borrow them someday, and that day may never come...

     
  9. douglasjre

    douglasjre Senior Member

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    It won't be long now
     
  10. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    Continuing from another thread that I accidentally started in Prius v Maintenance section.

    2010 Prius Five, 160K miles. Got my first serious shake after 2-3 nights of not using the car.

    As I continue to monitor the car, every morning I can hear a bit of hesitation during the first start: not yet a shake, no codes, but I can't hear it after the first start on the same day.

    There's no cylinder pressure loss - tested at 70 PSI and got 69.5 PSI on the second gauge for all four cylinders.

    I'm driving temporary without the right A-shape garnish installed the right front fixed window taped with a blue tape (tried to mitigate the rattle TSE - half-way through, scratched the paint, waiting on the Automotive Touchup to ship my order to fix it before I glue the new window back). As a result of this mishup, I can hear the engine perfectly - no misfires during driving.

    Here are the pictures of piston heads:

    Given that I got misfire codes P0303 and P0304 last time I let the car sit for multiple nights and the exhaust gas test results (blue liquid becomes green but not quite yellow), I believe this is the beginning of a head gasket failure and I better hurry up changing it.

    While inspecting the cylinder walls I noticed the scratch marks. However, the cross-hatch pattern is still visible through them.

    The car started burning a bit of oil - around 0.25 US qt @2500 miles.

    Should I be worried about the health of the short block? The "good" mechanic that I asked for a quote to see the difference for an engine rebuild vs new short block freaked out and said that he won't be messing around inside the engine. But he's happily to change my headgasket for $1000 (labor only, no parts) in the car without taking the engine out.
     
  11. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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  12. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    No I doubt you'll be doing the in the car nonsense because everything is starting to show decent wear now these engines have no meat on them there's nothing to machine once things starts getting scratched and all of this and that is just better to replace the reciprocating mass which is in the middle of the motor essentially You can buy all that built up from Toyota about 1600 You might even consider the generation 4 engine pieces or center section it may bolt right up to all the Gen 3 stuff or it should I can't guarantee that's going to be a whole lot better but at this kind of mileage on your car you certainly can't be trying to keep a generation 3 that long but maybe it's kind of planned to be disposed of and relatively short order 8 years or something seemingly all the ones I see are generally ready at about that time
     
  13. ttou68

    ttou68 Active Member

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    I'm not convinced that your have head gasket issue, have you checked for coolant loss?

    when was the spark plugs last changed since there's 160K miles on the clock?

    And have the EGR Circuit every been cleaned? A clogged system could cause miss fire...

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  14. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

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    Just pulled the plugs about an hour after a decent run on a nice hot day like we're having all over the country now unless you live somewhere very different when you do this all you're looking for on the insulation insulator portion of your plug the part that's inside of the combustion chamber you're looking for little tiny water droplets and smell each of those tips of those plugs you're looking for the smell of coolant lick your finger touch the plug touch your tongue If you don't know what coolant tastes like well I don't know what to say it's very distinct That's what you're looking for It will probably be there in cyl 1 or 2 . But you need to check them all and use a magnifying glass to look very carefully at the tips of the plugs once you see the moisture drops there you go now drop a camera down in there look back up at the gasket surface see the droplets hanging around the gasket surface mating points then when you take it apart you'll get a better look at all this and see how it took the three or five layer gasket right out
     
  15. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    Cylinder 4 looks steam cleaned. They should all look like 1 and 2.

    Coolant gas, coolant in oil, compression and leak down tests will all fail to detect an early Prius hg leak that seals itself up in seconds and will be clear for the rest of the day. Many times no codes. Often nothing for days or weeks. Many spend $1000 just shotgunning plugs, coils, injectors along with egr cleanings with no lasting results. Borescope and occasional symptoms are THE early diagnostic tool and most “good” mechanics don’t know this on a thermally cycling clutch dampered gen3 Prius.

    By the way, minor one second non-metallic stumbling on some startups is normal and is often not observed until the driver becomes hyper vigilant after the first severe multi second rattle.

    I suspect your $1000 quote may be cutting corners on this hg job unless he is cutting you a great deal. Timing chain reassembly errors are too common as are timing chain cover leaks. But those factors are usually diy errors.

    Rebuilt with Toyota revised pistons, rings and egr firmware is a better solution with head inspection and rebuild if needed by a machine shop.

    While removed the shop should perform a complete intake and egr system cleaning including the cooler. Ask the good mechanic if his price includes the head inspection/rebuild by a machine shop and the egr/intake cleanings, which can be $500 and $800 respectively at many shops.

    For reference, Toyota revised pistons, rings, head gasket, intake and egr valve along with updated ecm software on these cars trying to resolve oil burning and hg failures.

    Classic Gasketmasters “should I wait” hg video - late stage for coolant loss and holes in the block. The severe startup noise and shaking is any stage with early stages being occasional.

     
    #15 rjparker, Jul 10, 2024
    Last edited: Jul 10, 2024
  16. Eddie25

    Eddie25 Active Member

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    I would also hesitate to call it a head gasket just yet. It's highly suspect, but it's weird that'd be cylinders 3 and 4 and I'd think you see at least a little wetness. I got serious cold start shakes about 4 times randomly in the 5 years I had my car before the head gasket blew so it's not always the head gasket. If you get more shakes then I'd borescope the cylinders again after it sits for a while, looking for wetness. That being said $1000 + parts is a good deal. New short block or pistons and rings would be great but so would not spending a ton of money. If you caught it early enough your block surfaces might be fine. I've been burning more oil than that for 100k miles.

    As also mentioned, if you don't continue getting cold start shakes the EGR system could be a suspect. If cylinder 1 or 2 intake manifold runners get clogged it can cause issues with cylinders 3 and 4. That's happened on my car and it caused minor stumbling on light engine loads.

    Do you have a photo of the spark plugs with what cylinder they came from? If the plugs from 3 and 4 were dark I'd be thinking clogged intake, if they're clean I'd be thinking head gasket.
     
  17. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    Wetness is only viewed under specific conditions. Cold engine which opens the hg leak. Under coolant system pressure which can be pumped up manually. By using a top quality dual view borescope.

    video on another Toyota engine
    Car Care Nut HG Borescope at 7:40

     
    #17 rjparker, Jul 10, 2024
    Last edited: Jul 11, 2024
  18. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    I cleaned the intake manifold recently - there wasn't a single fully clogged port anywhere. Cleaned the EGR tube and co-located EGR valve part (without taking it off the car). The cooler hasn't been touched. EGR flow metrics - 18 (before cleaning) and 21 (after cleaning) - measured via Techstream ver.9.x

    I have pictures of all 4 spark plugs but can't establish the attribution anymore :(
     
  19. bkman

    bkman Junior Member

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    Wait - unless I mess it up mentally:
    IMG_1158 - cylinder 1
    IMG_1159 - cylinder 2
    IMG_1160 - cylinder 3
    IMG_1161 - cylinder 4
    (given the location on the tray)
     
  20. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    EGR will be reduced and too hot.