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Prius engine has an easy life

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Technical Discussion' started by bredekamp, Mar 5, 2008.

  1. bredekamp

    bredekamp Member

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    Have you ever considered that 1000 miles in a Prius is not equal to a 1000 miles in a non-hybrid? At least from the engines' point of view....

    Consider the following John and Jane are neighbors and happen to work a block from each other. John drives a Prius and Jane drives a regular car. Both leave home at the same time each morning. They live 20 miles from work. They both sit in the same traffic.

    It takes both of them 60 minutes to get to work. During that time Johns' car has traveled 20 miles, but because of traffic the engine only ran for 30 minutes.

    John - 20 miles - engine on for 30 minutes

    At the same time Janes' car has traveled 20 miles and the engine ran for 60 minutes.

    Jane - 20 miles - engine on for 60 minutes

    Although John and Jane traveled the same distance, Janes' car did twice as many revolutions (ran twice as long) as Johns car. This also means that Janes' engine endured more wear than Johns' engine.

    Perhaps ODOMETERS should read Millions of Revolutions instead of Miles....
     
  2. bat4255

    bat4255 2017 Prius v #2 and 2008 Gen II #2

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    Might help explain why 5K oil change for a Prius, and 3K oil change for a standard.
     
  3. priusenvy

    priusenvy Senior Member

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    Have you ever considered that most engine wear occurs when the engine is started, and that the hybrid is starting its engine many more times than the non-hybrid?

    Ok, that's true for cold starts, less true for warm starts. Also, I believe the Prius builds oil pressure before firing the spark when starting. But it is a significant factor that you completely overlooked. There is zero oil pressure at the time the engine starts spinning during a restart.
     
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  4. bbald123

    bbald123 Thermodynamics Law Enforcement

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    No, the oil pump is run by the power split device. Oil is flowing as soon as the MG starts moving the car. By the time the ICE starts the oil pressure is nominal.
     
  5. bredekamp

    bredekamp Member

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    There ya go.

    See, easy life.
     
  6. Rae Vynn

    Rae Vynn Artist In Residence

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    It doesn't have a 'starter', either, so the mechanical action of starting the ICE is a little bit different, which, I believe, reduces the 'starting wear' on the engine.
     
  7. pt95148

    pt95148 New Member

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    Nothing to do with this. Engine/oil/oil filter can run more than 5k before change. The 5K recommendation in the US has to to with our fondness of lawsuit. In the UK, Prius oil change is every 10k.
     
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  8. ScottY

    ScottY New Member

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  9. Boo

    Boo Boola Boola Member

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    ScottY,

    Living in Manhattan, I don't drive much. Would you happen to know if there is a time factor involved, e.g., should I change the oil and filter every 10k or 12 months, whichever comes first?
     
  10. Earthling

    Earthling New Member

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    If you are still under warranty, then change @ 5,000 miles, as instructed by Toyota.

    Regarding the old 3,000 miles number, very few vehicles have an oil change interval that short. It's 7,500 miles on my conventional Civic, half that for "severe duty."

    As for the original question, I have a BMW motorcycle which calls for oil changes @ 6,000 miles or at least once a year.

    Harry
     
  11. patsparks

    patsparks An Aussie perspective

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    Jane's engine didn't do twice as many revolutions when you take into account that when Jane's engine is idling it isn't at anything like the RPM it runs at while driving along, however the Prius engine in John's car doesn't run when slowing, going down a slight slope at steady speed and sometimes while travelling on flat ground.

    The idea that engine wear is greatest when first starting the engine is mostly correct however a couple of things to remember, when the engine has only been off a few short minutes and the engine is warm the oil stays in the bearings as if it was running. Put a drop of oil on your fingers and try to squeeze it out from between your finger, your fingers remain slippery. The engine spins to near 1000rpm with cam timing allowing it to do so with little load on any component before the cam timing alters and fuel gets squirted into the manifold to produce power.

    An engine idling runs slightly richer than when underway causing dilution of oil with fuel, due to some fuel condensing on the bore and making its way past the rings. This is why if you took your conventional car on a long high speed trip when it was due for an oil change after using it in traffic for 3000 miles or so the oil level dropped to the low mark. This is the fuel that is in the oil evaporating off from the oil. That is why the oil level doesn't drop when all 4 stroke I/C engines use *some* oil by design.

    I think the Prius engine as it pretty good, it gets plenty of rest because it only runs when there is work to do however I'm not sure it is 50% less work in the described scenario.

    Maybe the car should have an hour meter like tractors and boats?
     
  12. Bob64

    Bob64 Sapphire of the Blue Sky

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    Uhh... Actually the transaxle oil pump is not active when the car is in EV mode. I believe hobbit or someone brought up the dangers of extended periods without the engine turning on.
     
  13. V8Cobrakid

    V8Cobrakid Green Handyman

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    the prius runs the pump off of the ice. this was mentioned several years back.


    the prius engine only runs between set rpms.. no red lines.. so less wear that way too!

    agreed, the prius engine should have an hour clock.
     
  14. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Agreed, the Prius needs a Hobbs or similar hourmeter.

    I used to have a 2000 GMC Sierra pickup truck, with the Vortec 5.3 V8. I think this motor is also used in Australia, it's an LS-1 variant with iron block and aluminum heads

    Anyway, with the motor off and key off, one could open the door and push and hold the odometer reset button. The odometer display would turn on and display the km's.

    Continue to hold the odometer button, and the display would then display the engine hours, such as "897.2 hr"

    That's a clever trick, don't you think? Despite all the reliability problems with my GMC truck, I must admit it had some clever engineering
     
  15. bbald123

    bbald123 Thermodynamics Law Enforcement

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    Then it was mentioned incorrectly. The oil pump is on the same shaft as the MG. When the MG turns so does the oil pump. Here's a cut-away from 2004.

    http://www.ornl.gov/~webworks/cppr/y2001/rpt/120761.pdf

    I'll clarify this further. From here: Information Bridge: DOE Scientific and Technical Information - Sponsored by OSTI

    "Oil inside the hybrid drive housing splash lubricates the
    bearings, gears, and other moving parts while an oil pump supplies lubricating oil to the power
    split device."

    This is not the ICE oiling systme. It has its own. But, because it spins to 1000 RPM before start, startup oiling isn't an issue.

    The MG sets and PSD have a separate oiling system that is functional during electric only mode. So, that's not the cause of the limited EV mode available. I've read elsewhere, though I can't put my finger on it, that the EV mode limitation is related to battery temps.
     
  16. Bob64

    Bob64 Sapphire of the Blue Sky

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    http://priuschat.com/forums/prius-t...e-glide-above-42-mph-possible.html#post561141

    The thread that mentioned something about the PSD not being lubed when the engine is off...

    speaking of engine... I noticed this interesting tidbit:


    2.2.1 Engine
    The design of the 1.5-liter engine in the 2004 Prius is based on the Atkinson Cycle in which compression
    stroke and expansion stroke duration can be set independently. A supercharger is used with the engine to
    increase its output.


    Supercharger!?
     
  17. A-Prius Owner

    A-Prius Owner Junior Member

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    There's one thing that hasn't been brought up and that is the negative effect of the added dead weight of everything that isn't contributing to engine horse power as in the case when the car is used in non stop and go driving and if the uphill grades are long. Here's an example if every day two Priuses both the same weight drove up pikes peak but one was altered to have a larger engine as much as allowed from the weight savings of the car not being hybrid then which car's engine would last longer ?
     
  18. NoMoShocks

    NoMoShocks Electrical Engineer

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    It's a trick question, isn't it. The Prius without the hybrid parts would not be a Prius and therefore the Prius with the hybrid parts would last longer.
     
  19. ScottY

    ScottY New Member

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    Sorry Boo, I can't really predict the oil change interval.

    This is what I'm doing. I sampled the oil around 4k miles. I use Blackstone for my analysis. They suggested that I can safely go another 3k. I sampled again at 8k miles. The numbers look good and the oil still has pretty high TBN. They suggested that I can go another 3k. But I think I'll play it safe and change the oil at 10k miles. When I do, I'll send them the sample again to see if the oil is still good at 10k miles. If it is, I'll use that interval, since my driving pattern is pretty much the same.

    I use their oil pump because it fits nicely with their sampling kit. Blackstone Laboratories - Pump.

    All this is going to cost you more in the beginning, but you will consume less oil and save some $$ in the long run.

    If you are worry about warranty issue, I think the oil analysis reports will show that this is not damaging the engine. If you are still worry, I will suggest that you stick with the 5k mile/6 month interval and use regular oil.
     
  20. ScottY

    ScottY New Member

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    Bob, the Prius does not have a supercharger. If you are reading that national lab report, I think they made a mistake. From what I've read, the Atkinson cycle engine has low torque in the low-RPM range. Cars with Atkinson cycle engine usually use supercharger to help in that area. In the Prius, the low-RPM torque is supplied by the MG's. The national lab find out that the Prius has an Atkinson cycle engine, and assumed that it has a supercharger.

    Correct me if I'm wrong.