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What services you need and what you don't

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by galaxee, Feb 22, 2007.

  1. Johanna

    Johanna New Member

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    Thanks for this good information! I just inherited a Prius - the owner is no longer in this world, and with him went all the knowledge of this car, so I am trying to understand it all. This may be a silly question, but just where do you get inverter fluid? :rolleyes: We've reached 100 K, and the fluid is low. My malfunction light is on, and we are trying to find out what may be the problem rather than spend $70 for a diagnostic that tells us we need to change some fluid. While we are at it, any other way besides the dealer to deal with repair?

    Thanks so much for any help you can offer!

    Johanna
     
  2. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Johanna @ Mar 18 2007, 09:32 PM) [snapback]408139[/snapback]</div>
    At 100k miles I think you should go ahead and have the inverter fluid changed as well as any other recommended 100k mile maintenance stuff.
     
  3. dcoyne78

    dcoyne78 New Member

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    The 60K service looks pretty straightforward. If someone knows a competent mechanic, is there any reason this couldn't be done by that mechanic rather than at the dealership. I am simply talking about the standard inspection items and a rear brake adjustment, these seem like things a good mechanic would be able to handle. I don't plan to service the cooling system until 100 K, at that point it's just a drain and re-fill not a flush, correct? (This I will do at the dealer.)

    Dennis
     
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  4. Skwyre7

    Skwyre7 What's the catch?

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    I had my 60k service done today. I had them do only the passport work, plus an alignment, rear brake check/cleaning, and replace the PCV valve. They did not have a PCV valve in stock, and the tech said it was not a necessity, so they skipped that one. I also had them install my mudguards while the tires were off. They also did a state inspection. Cost (minus rental car and installation of mudguards and state inspection) was $229.

    And on a side note, my Prius turn TWO on Wednesday. This was part of her birthday present. :D
     
  5. Cocoatreat

    Cocoatreat New Member

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    wow......sounds like a bargain at $229! i bought some mudguards on ebay........and asked the dealership to install them on my 5k checkup.......they didnt charge me anything! i guess i was lucky!!
     
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  6. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    I went in, today, for my 60k service. 4 hours and $280 later it's done. Interestingly they only charged me $12 for my transaxle fluid replacement...kinda makes me worry if they really did it. The installed my Fumoto valve for free....little do they realize that now I'll be doing my own oil changes!!

    PCV valve was part of the routine there. I asked for and got an alignement...everything was still in spec except the right rear toe which was at +0.31 and the upper limit of normal is +0.28. But, as we know, there are no Toyota procedures for fixing that. 0.03 out doesn't seem like much and there's no evidence of premature tire wear. Gal, or anyone, got any recs on what to do, if anything, about that minor toe issue?

    I only gave them 3 quarts of oil, got all kinds of warnings about how it took 3.7 liters (specs say 3.9) and how I'd get warning lights with the under fill (I don't and never have). Dude wasn't happy with me for disagreeing with him....same guy that last time parked my car at the door with a bottle of ice cold water and a customer service survey...this time no water, car in the regular lot, and no survey.

    In any case, they got me and out the same day didn't fuss about my specific requests and I should be in pretty good shape until the 100k mark. Probably start doing my own oil changes every 10k miles from now on.
     
  7. Winston

    Winston Member

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    No offense meant Galaxee, but have you ever done a used oil analysis on the transmission fluid? As mentioned by Efusco, it has been noted by others that it is pretty well spent by 50k miles. I don't think you can tell much by looking at the fluid. While the fluid is fairly pricy, draining and refilling it is a very simple job on the Prius. Personally I trust the used oil analysis of other owners fluids more than I trust the owners manual.

    Same goes for the engine coolant. While todays engine coolants are very sophisticated, and last for many years. I would doubt that the corrosion inhibitors would keep being effective past 5 years. Again, the color of the fluid does not tell you much. I would definately recommend changing the coolant at 5 year max.

    Why would you think that brake fluid could last ten years? While the brakes on a Prius are hardly ever used, 10 years seems like a long time. Is the Prius fluid something other than regular DOT 3/4 fluid? Wouldn't it have absorbed quite a bit of water in 10 years?

    I don't mean to be disrespectful, but I am surprised at some of your recommendations for fluid change intervals.

    I agree that most of the other toyota services are just a bunch of "checks" that are not really ever performed. I find it sad that people think they are taking car of their cars by religeously taking their cars in for the "recommended" service and they never do the service that will really help extend the cars life. Namely doing reasonable changes of the cars various fluids. Or, some people change the engine oil every 3k miles and then never change any of the other fluids for the life of the car.
     
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  8. galaxee

    galaxee mostly benevolent

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    okay, let's clarify things here. these are general guidelines for typical conditions and the maximum limits that DH would recommend. these are not specific to driving type, region, driving conditions, etc. these are not specific to people who are extremely particular and want to do things early. these are guidelines that will ensure your car gets the proper maintenance without overspending on things that the dealer might try to upsell to you.

    we are not here to fatten the dealer's (and our own, from the locals) pocketbooks unnecessarily. service departments are in business for their best interest, not yours. DH's customers that ARE particular and want things done early... he's happy to have em, because they're a good source of income. his next favorite moneymakers are the ones who don't take care of their cars at all. he collects the check for their lack of proper care.

    this thread was intended to strike a middle ground, not all of us have money burning holes in our pockets. we understand that. while our livelihood is based on the two above-listed categories of people, we don't want PC members to become the latter group, and we want them to have a choice of whether to become a member of the former group.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Winston @ Jun 26 2007, 07:01 PM) [snapback]468536[/snapback]</div>
    actually, you can tell a lot by looking at the trans fluid. no, we don't participate in the whole UOA scheme, and no, he's not basing his judgments on the owner's manual, either. while he doesn't look at every single prius that comes through, he has only once seen one under 50k with fluid that looked less than just fine (even then he wouldn't have pushed for a drain/fill, even though he could have profited from it, because it wasn't that bad yet.)

    the prius trans is not sucking air in and out like a normal trans, so the fluid doesn't take the same beating that fluid in other auto trans does. toyota's general stance is that WS is lifetime fluid... don't recommend going past 100k, or 5 years if you want a timepoint.

    i've mentioned that it won't hurt to change it sooner. that's as far as we're getting into that argument.

    the color of the engine coolant does tell you a story. not the whole story, but the general story. toyota's recommended interval is 10 years/100k. 10 years, yes, that's too long. 100k is fine, it's been engineered to go that far, but he agrees that 5 years is about as long as you want to go time wise.

    at 100k it is not expected to look nice and pink, that was more of an "in case it was done earlier and you don't know it" as in the case of a used car buyer or if the car was in a front end accident that required a coolant change. bleeding the coolant is a PITA and is really easy to screw up. at the best, just a couple lights on the dash, at worst, major damage as a result.

    general guideline again- more of an upper limit. brake fluid color does show changes, again, as wear and tear accumulate. the interval will vary depending on where you live, how you drive, etc. but note that toyota specifies no interval at all. what DH has seen is that about 10 years old is where the fluid is reaching the end of its life in the toyotas he has seen. many dealers don't even have equipment to do brake fluid exchanges!

    you're welcome to comment on whatever you like. you're also welcome to maintain your car as you see fit. and like i said these are recommendations based on general conditions for the average driver. he did make sure to indicate that with the fluid changes you can't go wrong changing early if you like.
     
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  9. Winston

    Winston Member

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    Thanks for the quick reply Galaxee.
     
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  10. apriusfan

    apriusfan New Member

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    I have been considering replacing (drain and refill) the CVT transmission fluid at somewhere around 5,000 or 10,000 miles to get rid of metal particles that have been thrown off during the initial break-in period. Any thoughts/comments?
     
  11. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    It is threads like this that make coming to PC fun, learn things that both save $$$ and extend car life. Thanks to all. Comments:

    1) At the first sign of any vibration in the car, getting the tires balanced solves the problem. At the first sign of any uneven tire wear, an alignment is in order. This assumes you keep tire pressures monitored. I am not encouraging waiting till this occurs to do something, but I have saved a lot of money by following this path when it does occur.

    2) I very much like to perform all the maintenance myself and want to keep the car healthy, but I absolutely detest returning used fluids to "the system" if I can find a way not to. As a result, I use synthetic oil after initial engine breakin, then I start doubling the change interval. (Note that the Classic Prius had 7500 mile oil change intervals and the HSD Prius has 5000 mile oil change intervals, yet use the same engine.)

    3) What I am really looking for is a way of determining the fluid changes based on fluid analysis. I would happily handover $40 bucks for a fluid analysis of all fluids in the car that would tell me the actual condition so I would never have to dump good stuff into "the system". (This is a business opportunity someone!)
     
  12. tochatihu

    tochatihu Senior Member

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    FL_Prius, used engine oil analyses are becoming more common in Prius, and have been posted here at PC. Lots of labs do them, but I have used Blackstone. For the oil, what you want to see is viscosity still in range and TBN not used up. It should not accumulate too much engine wear metals, insolubles, water, fuel antifreeze etc. If still good then longer oil change intervals might be considered. Synthetic oils for the long haul; I don't know of any Prius going beyond 8k miles on conventional oil.

    Similarly transmission fluid can be analysed by certain labs. It is based on these that some of us like the type T IV fluid to be changed at 30k and the type WS at 60k.

    Brake fluid is analyzed for % water absorption directly or indirectly by its copper content. Good brake shops can do this quickly and tell you whether to change.

    I imagine there are tests for copper or aluminum accumulation in antifreeze/coolant, which by their presence would announce that the corrosion inhibitors are depleted. I changed mine own from LLC to SLLC recently. Even though the rated life of LLC is 30k I went about 45k miles. The red stuff came out of the inverter looking like new, and from the engine loop with only a few rubber bits (erosion of tubing). Mind you I did not test it chemically, but it looked very new.

    So for all of these fluids the change interval could be based on chemistry. Some would turn out longer than Toyota suggests, and perhaps others shorter. Problem is to suggest longer intervals to folks who are not getting the analyses done. That could lead them towards problems.
     
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  13. apriusfan

    apriusfan New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(FL_Prius_Driver @ Jun 30 2007, 10:40 AM) [snapback]470647[/snapback]</div>
    Don't you get the tires (and wheels) road force balanced when originally purchased? Regarding alignment, I have a suspension shop that I pay for an initial alignment and then every 5,000 miles I get free checks. If any of the settings are off when checked, I only pay for bringing the errant setting back into specification. There have been times where everything is fine for 10,000 miles and then toe or camber is off. With this model, I have been able to average 40,000 miles per set of tires.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(FL_Prius_Driver @ Jun 30 2007, 10:40 AM) [snapback]470647[/snapback]</div>
    Going to a 10,000 mile engine oil drain interval with full synthetic (especially if you use oil analysis to confirm that the oil is not breaking down) is probably a valid one. However, during the factory warranty period, you are putting yourself at risk for a denial of warranty action. If something breaks on the engine that is lubrication based, you are going to have an uphill fight to get Toyota to cover it. And frankly, the cost of litigation is going to be far greater than the cost of doing an oil & filter change every 5,000 miles. It basically comes down to the concept of an ounce of prevention versus a pound of cure.
     
  14. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    Thanks greatly for the replies. Let me clarify the key issue. I have already been through oil warranty battles with the 99 Camry (oil sludging). It turns out that the key linchpin of a real legal fight is not getting oil changed at 5k or 10k or whatever, it is showing that you have been maintaining your car responsibly and that you have the documentation to back that up. Won that battle with good documentation. I also make the dramatic distinctions between Toyota Dealers (good and bad), Toyota USA (better), and Toyota Japan (very good). Yes, a dealer can fight you sucessfully, but the dealer cannot fight Toyota USA/Japan with any hope of success. In reality, there will not be a lubrication problem with a well maintained Prius Engine running synthetic oil at 10k intervals. That was not true of the 99 Camry engine running non-synthetic oil.

    That said, I am aware that I can pay for fluid analysis (however, providing the specific locations is very welcome). What I am after is 1) convenience and 2) a set of acceptable thresholds for replacing or not replacing the oil. The convenience is to allow the concept to become mainstream, just like most of us here are helping the hybrid become mainstream. I am one of the few (or hopefully not) that would consider $40 for validating that my oil does not need to be changed to be better spent than having it changed for that price. The real key is I could have the samples taken, drive off, get the results off the web. Save lots of time all around. Obviously for this to work, I need know what thresholds matter (which I can do with more education) but it sure will not become mainstream till the other 90% of users have a Go/No Go threshold.

    Now, tochatihu has provided the first steps towards implementing a good program. If I use synthetic oil, and have a lab analysis document, a balky dealer will be hard pressed to claim missing a 5k caused the engine block to crack. The core point is that a lot of waste is being generated dumping perfectly good fluids into the "disposal/recycle system" ....and that some much larger waste is being generated by early mechanical failures not being detected by future, easy, fluid analysis. There is a larger goal here, less waste, better maintenance.

    (P.S. Yes, I do balance and align at tire replacement. Free alignment checks may be good, but they do take time and I have found that Toyotas are great for keeping alignment. In this case my system has served me well. It has been the "hardness" of the tires that determines their wear life.)
     
  15. apriusfan

    apriusfan New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(apriusfan @ Jun 29 2007, 07:15 PM) [snapback]470418[/snapback]</div>
    Bump. Anyone? I kind of thought that this question would generate all manner of comment as it is somewhat analogous to whether one should do a drain of the engine oil and filter around the 1,000 mile mark.
     
  16. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    RE: CVT Fluid Replacement

    There is a lot of discussion scattered through various threads. The full answer is out there somewhere. Quick Summary of what I have found:
    1) Toyota's standard servicing schedule does not call out for any replacement at all.
    2) Some number of transaxial failures have occured, possibly due to fluid issues, possibly not.
    3) An emerging consensus is that a change at 60k should be considered.

    Few would try and convince any owner that they should not care for their car as best they can. My desire would be to do the analysis (if possible) so that a whole crankcase of perfectly good fluid is not wasted at such a short interval (or if there are metal flakes, where are they coming from). If I remember correctly, there is a magnet on the drain plug to collect steel particles. I do not know how one checks this magnet except by draining the fluid to begin with.
     
  17. apriusfan

    apriusfan New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(FL_Prius_Driver @ Jul 1 2007, 01:01 PM) [snapback]471124[/snapback]</div>
    Regarding 1. above, "Lifetime fill" is a marketing term, best interpreted to mean for the lifetime of the warranty period....

    It is to avoid a CVT failure that I am considering an early initial replacement of the fluid. Other manufacturers that offer CVTs are experiencing failures around 60,000 miles. The proportion of failed CVTs to total CVTs is a secret that is protected better than the U.S. Dept. of Energy is able to protect designs for nuclear warheads, so no help to assess the true magnitude of the exposure.

    I am less concerned with pre-maturely dumping the CVT fluid. The cost of the fluid pales in comparison to the cost of the CVT itself. I am more concerned with getting the little bits of metal out of the fluid (and by extension, the CVT itself). The metal particles would be sourced from the CVT belts and pulleys experiencing the break-in process. If there is a magnetic drain plug, I might be disposed to replacing the fluid at somewhere around the 10,000 mile point, followed by a second fluid replacement at the 60,000 mile point.
     
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  18. galaxee

    galaxee mostly benevolent

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    the prius 'transmission' is far different than the CVT you're thinking of. there are no belts or pulleys or anything, it's a fixed set of gears. there is no friction so there should be no metal wear.

    check out john's site at john1701a.com- under the "prius info" header click on the power-split-device link. you'll see what i mean.

    again, so long as the fluid change is done properly you're not going to hurt anything. but there isn't a need to do so that early.
     
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  19. apriusfan

    apriusfan New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(galaxee @ Jul 1 2007, 02:43 PM) [snapback]471151[/snapback]</div>
    I may have missed something (and my appologies in advance if I have), but in this photo, there appears to be a metal link belt running from north to south in roughly the center of the photo. Further, on a plane that appears to be aligned with the center of the crankshaft of the engine, there is what appears to be a variable gap pulley that is attached to the belt - all of which point to a traditional CVT application.
    [​IMG]
     
  20. IsrAmeriPrius

    IsrAmeriPrius Progressive Member

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    From HowStuffWorks: