Overheat at interstate speeds after numerous new parts & HG

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by pandion, Apr 28, 2026 at 9:22 PM.

  1. pandion

    pandion Junior Member

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    Vehicle:
    2014 Prius
    Model:
    Three
    2014 Prius
    236k miles
    iCarsoft CR v3.0 diagnostic tool

    I have a mild overheat issue at highway speeds and hills. Around town with the A/C on, the temperature stays below 205F with the radiator fans on low speed from the A/C signal. At 60 mph plus, the temperature sometimes hits 205F and the diagnostic tool shows the fan going to high speed. On the interstate at 80 mph at 75F ambient, the temperature is around 210F and spikes to 220+ when the cruise control accelerates going up mild Florida panhandle hills on I-10. I am perplexed.

    Work done:

    2023, 190k miles – Replaced water pump impeller on original pump when I had intermittent overheat at highway speeds. Also cleaned the EGR cooler and manifold, and replaced the thermostat, coolant temperature sensor, and spark plugs.

    Aug, Sept 2025 – 800 mile round-trip on flat, Florida roads with a light trailer, no issues, no spitting coolant, but did not have diagnostic tool attached for real time temperatures.

    Nov 2025, ~233k miles – Started seeing slight disappearance of coolant. Suspected head gasket, but no combustion gases in cooling system. Found light coolant seepage on radiator between fin core and side tank. Replaced radiator (Nissens) and radiator hoses (Gates, Dayco).

    Feb-Mar, 2026, 235k miles – Continued to have disappearing coolant and worsened to an intermittent stumble on start, progressing to more regular stumbling and misfire codes on #1. Borescope in #1 cylinder showed a glistening, steam-cleaned piston and cruddy, carbon crusted #2-4. Replaced head gasket with Felpro. Replaced water pump impeller and thermostat (Motorad) and cleaned EGR cooler and manifold. Also new spark plugs and coils.

    Early Apr 2026 – No cooling issues or lost coolant in town, no stumbling. Attempted interstate road trip, but found coolant on and around the reservoir at highway speeds. Replaced reservoir and cap (Dorman) out of desperation to try to continue the trip, but still spitting coolant at highway speeds.

    Recent – Test drives with diagnostic tool with real-time data at 80 mph on I-10. Temperature spikes to low 220+F and spits small amounts of coolant from reservoir at 80 mph and hills when cruise control accelerates, water pump rpms high 4k to low 5k with actual slightly higher than commanded, fan to high speed at 205F. Replaced water pump (Autozone Duralast) with no change in behavior at speed. Research showed possible thermostatic control valve problem on the exhaust heat exchanger. Bypassed exhaust heat exchanger down near the exhaust. Still no change in behavior at speed at 75F ambient, with the exception that the high temperature recovers to below 200F when slowing down much, much quicker than with the exhaust heat exchanger connected.

    Never had coolant system sealant in it and the antifreeze is fresh and proper mix. System purged of air per manual after refills.

    To recap, new radiator, radiator hoses, thermostat, head gasket, water pump, reservoir and cap, bypassed exhaust heat exchanger, still have temperature spikes to low 220+F and spitting coolant from the reservoir at 80 mph and hills. Also had a hybrid system fault and a weak 12VDC battery, and the battery was replaced between the water pump replacement and the exhaust heat exchanger bypass.

    I never hooked up the diagnostic tool and ran at interstate speeds prior to this month to check real time temperatures when initially looking for disappearing coolant, and from what I recall, I wasn’t spitting coolant. I am perplexed. I feel like I’m looking at either having messed up something during the head gasket repair (but what??) or I have a defective radiator or thermostat. If anyone has ideas, I am more than game to listen.
     
  2. BiomedO1

    BiomedO1 Senior Member

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    Just spit-balling here; you've never changed the water pump - just the impeller???? Could the impeller not be spinning fast enough; coolant flow? 80 mph airflow through the radiator should be able to keep the engine cool...Unless coolant isn't moving fast enough or no heat transfer at the radiator.
    How does the AC condenser look?
     
  3. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    Many reports of problems until genuine (not counterfeit looking like oem) water pump was installed.

    Sounds like the exhaust heat exchanger thermostat actuator was stuck in its cold "valve closed" position forcing exhaust heating of the coolant at all times. While the bypass helps, you also have to force the actuator in a "valve open" position for straight through exhaust flow.

    Exhaust Heat Recirc System.jpeg

    Hopefully you don't have a clogged catalytic converter with codes or an o2 spacer on the cat to fool the ecu.

    The exhaust heat recirulation system could have been the initial issue but now you have aftermarket water pump, engine thermostat and radiator.
     
  4. pandion

    pandion Junior Member

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    I watched the original water pump speed with the new impeller and it was about 5000 rpm. Same speed as with the aftermarket pump with its impeller. Unless the new radiator or thermostat are defective out of the box, there's no nothing to block coolant flow. I cleaned the condenser when I replaced the radiator a few months ago, so it's clean.

    There are threads discussing the issue with the original water pump being the impeller, not the electric motor. The impeller fixed my problem a few years ago as it had cracked and swollen. The car has done a couple 3000 mile road trips and a number of 1000 mile since then.
    P0117, intermittent overheat, and water pump rotor
     
  5. pandion

    pandion Junior Member

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    The water pump was not the problem as the commanded and target speeds for both the original with aftermarket impeller and the Duralast were very similar at similar temperatures and loads. Perhaps the longevity of the Duralast will bite me, but a)I kept the original, and b)there's the Autozone lifetime warranty.

    No codes since the head gasket misfire codes. None for cat or O2 sensors.

    I've used Motorad thermostats in several other cars, including an RV and a race car without incident. I did order an Aisin in case I get desperate and feel like lighting another $40 in fire.

    Thanks for the diagram and the info on the exhaust heat exchanger. It's been difficult finding information on it. I'll check that in the morning.