[Need Help] 2004 Prius in Cambodia - Intermittent 4 Lights, Normal Brake Feel, VSC Once Self-Clear

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by Felix1414, Dec 16, 2025 at 8:32 AM.

  1. Felix1414

    Felix1414 New Member

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    Hello everyone,

    I am a brand new Prius owner (previously only drove gasoline cars) and I'm reaching out for help with a confusing and worrying issue on my recently acquired car. Local shops have given me a unanimous but poorly explained diagnosis, and I'm hoping the collective wisdom here can guide me.

    1. Vehicle Info:

    • Model Year: 2004 Toyota Prius (2nd Generation).

    • Mileage: Approximately 122,000 miles.

    • Location: Cambodia.
    2. Problem Description (The Core Issue):
    My dashboard intermittently lights up with the following FOUR warning lights all at once (Note: the separate ABS light is NOT on):

    • Red Triangle (Master Warning)

    • CHECK ENGINE light

    • VSC light

    • Brake Warning light (the yellow circle with an exclamation mark and parentheses around it)

    Critical Details & Observations:

    1. Normal Brake Feel: Importantly, when the lights are on, the brake pedal feels perfectly normal—no stiffness or change in performance. This seems different from many reports I've read.

    2. Intermittent & Changing: The lights can appear on startup or while driving. On one specific occasion, after all lights were on, the VSC light turned off by itself during a drive the next day, while the other three lights remained illuminated.

    3. Hybrid Battery Gauge Behavior: In daily driving, I've noticed the battery charge indicator (on the multi-segment display) often quickly climbs several segments into the blue (high charge) zone, only to drop back down to just one or two segments (yellow/low zone) shortly after, triggering the engine to charge it again. This cycle repeats frequently.
    3. What Three Repair Shops Said (The Confusing Part):
    I consulted three shops, all concluding "hybrid battery failure" but with varying levels of diagnosis:

    • Shop 1: Used a diagnostic scanner. Verbally stated “the computer shows the hybrid battery pack is failing,” but provided no fault codes, battery module voltage data, or any printed report.

    • Shops 2 & 3: Based solely on looking at a photo of my dashboard lights (no scan), immediately said “battery problem.”
      All three recommended a very costly battery replacement. The lack of concrete evidence, especially given the intermittent nature and normal brake feel, makes me deeply skeptical.
    4. My Research & Why I'm Skeptical:
    My reading (including on this forum) indicates that this specific 4-light combination is a hallmark of ABS Actuator/Brake Booster failure in Gen 2 Prii, often due to a faulty pressure sensor/valve (codes like C1241/C1256).

    • A failing hybrid battery typically causes persistent drivability issues, not this kind of intermittent, self-clearing (VSC light) electrical fault.

    • My normal brake feel suggests the ABS actuator's hydraulic function may be intact, pointing to an electronic sensor fault within it.

    • The shops' failure to provide any verifiable data (codes or battery module voltages) makes their expensive conclusion hard to trust.
    5. My Specific Questions to the Community:

    1. Has anyone experienced this exact combination: intermittent 4 lights (no ABS light) with normal brake feel, and a VSC light that can self-clear? Was it the ABS actuator or the hybrid battery?

    2. Does the described “quick up-and-down” battery gauge behavior sound normal for a 20-year-old battery, or is it a clear sign of severe capacity loss? As a new owner, I have no baseline for comparison.

    3. What is the definitive diagnostic step? Should I demand the specific ABS/brake system codes or the individual voltage readings of all 28 hybrid battery modules to know the truth? Which is more critical here?

    4. Could these two problems be related? For example, could a weak battery cause unstable voltage that triggers the ABS actuator codes?

    5. Given my location in Cambodia, what is the most sensible and cost-effective path forward? If it's the ABS actuator, is component-level repair (sensor/valve) viable? Are there reliable parts suppliers that ship internationally?
    Additional Photo (Display Menu):
    For reference, here is a photo of my center display screen: 58f8e96edda2ae96ce5756cbf51f25c9.jpg 5040e64de8dd74fb39203c18759b4f5e.jpg
    Thank you so much for your time and expertise. Any guidance, shared experiences, or practical advice on how to proceed would be a tremendous help to a confused new Prius owner.
     

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  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    welcome!
    start with a load test of the 12 volt battery to make sure you are getting the correct codes.
    then get it scanned with a prius aware scanner: tech stream, autel maxi 200, etc.
    then post the codes here.
    yes, quickly fluctuating battery indicator means the capacity is low. you could try reconditioning, but a 20 year old battery is pretty old.
    all the best!
     
  3. Brian1954

    Brian1954 Senior Member

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    You can not guess the one hundred or so different problems that your car could have based on the combination of warning lights. You first need to read all the diagnostic trouble codes that the car has. You can do this yourself if you have a Prius capable scanner.

    I recommend the Autel maxi AP200. In Northern America, you can buy it on Amazon for about $60 USD. Be aware that this scanner requires that you install the Autel app on your smartphone and create an Autel online account. You will need internet access to log in to the Autel account to use the app on your phone. Look at this link for a review of different scanners for a Gen 2 Prius, https://priuschat.com/index.php?posts/3290690

    Based on your description of the hybrid battery behavior, it sounds like the problem is the battery, but you need to scan the car to get all the trouble codes.
     
  4. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Shops 2 & 3, and also you, are trying to read more into a light pattern than is possible for the lights to reveal.

    The warning triangle comes on to indicate trouble codes raised in the HV control ECU, which can raise around 200 known trouble codes.

    The ECB and VSC lights indicate trouble codes raised in the brake/skid ECU, which has its own couple hundred codes it can raise. (However, there are two codes—C1259 for ECB, and C1310 for VSC—that only mean the skid ECU knows there are codes in the HV control ECU. So it's possible, even common, that these lights are just on for the same reason as the warning triangle. It's best, still, to get the codes and confirm that, not just to assume it.)

    The check-engine light generally comes on to indicate trouble codes raised in the ECM, which also has a lot of codes it can raise. Just to keep things interesting, though, the chart of HV battery-related codes in the repair manual may also list some of those codes as lighting the check-engine light (a/k/a "MIL"). I don't have a gen 2 repair manual open right now; in the gen 3 manual there are about 48 such codes.

    So you might not be crazy if you thought the ECB and VSC lights might be on because of the triangle, and the MIL might be on also because of the triangle, if the code(s) lighting the triangle might include one or more of the 48 battery-related codes that also light the MIL.

    But even so, as I hope you're already starting to think, you'd be better off reading those codes and knowing what issues you've got, rather than making assumptions.

    Even the 48 or so battery-related codes that can light the MIL are not all codes that mean the whole battery has to be replaced. Some of them are about voltage or temperature sensor wiring and repairable issues like that.

    Even without a scan tool, you can find out the codes behind the ECB and VSC lights, this way:

    Blink (a/k/a Flash) Codes – How to. | PriusChat

    A scan tool is needed, though, to get the HV control, battery, and/or engine codes.
     
    #4 ChapmanF, Dec 16, 2025 at 8:25 PM
    Last edited: Dec 16, 2025 at 8:56 PM