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NEW (old) Prius - help me get it home!

Discussion in 'Generation 1 Prius Discussion' started by kuwona, Nov 15, 2008.

  1. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Hi GW,

    It sounds like the inverter is working since you are getting 13.8V when the car is READY, so that indeed is good news.

    Did you download the procedure to purge air out of the inverter coolant loop? That procedure is very time consuming and you must continue to work at it, opening and closing the two bleed valves, until you can see the front of the inverter coolant reservoir contains a higher fluid level compared to the rear of the reservoir. That will demonstrate that fluid is flowing through the reservoir.

    Since you "bench tested" the pump and found that it will pump water, then it probably is OK. As you said the old coolant was "thick", the car probably did not had the coolant replaced in the past.

    The original inverter may have a clogged coolant passage. However since you replaced the inverter, hopefully the salvage inverter does not also have a clog within.
     
  2. Shubin Andrey

    Shubin Andrey Junior Member

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    my short story:
    - the original pump is broken after 3 month of my prius purchase. didn't found locally the original one, and we installed russian analog from russian car (80% classic prius owners do the same in russia with the prius pump problem). the guys who replace pump says: the reason of the broken pump - very old coolant that should be replaced! russian analog is still with my prius (it was very cheap ~$17 and match for replacement sharp), the only differences is it sound very high, so i can hear it when the engine is off.
    - after replacement of coolant, it's level was ok, next day i found that there is not enought level coolant in reservoir. there was about 0.2 liter missing and i add it in. after that - cooland flow is disapeared. car was ON for about 30 minutes - no coolant flow. but after the driving for about 5 km - the coolant flow is appeas again and currently no problems with it.
     
  3. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    Thanks Guys for your input. I did not get the air bleed procedure from techinfo, but I did find it here... Toyota Tech Tip: Prius Hybrid Lacks Power&

    In my case, I was able to get very little air out of the sysytem after the first 1 or 2 openings of the bleed valves. I could keep doing the procedure, but I suspect the normal situation is that people get more air bubbles after each bleed/pump cycle. Do you guys think I should keep going with the bleed/pump cycles even though no more air is coming out?

    The alternative I am considering is to drain all of the coolant out of the circuit and start over. Do you guys have opinions about using a garden hose to "flush" the system out? I could turn it down to a trickle to ensure that there in only a little pressure. Is tap water dangerous enough that even trace deposits would be harmful?
     
  4. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    I think that you should continue the procedure, running the pump 20-30 seconds at a time, as per the link that you found. No need to drain the coolant out and start over.

    After you've done the procedure another 6-7 times, if you still hear air in the system and you don't see the step in the fluid at the reservoir, then drive the car around the block and see if that helps.

    You can't declare victory until you do not hear air in the system, and you can see the fluid step in the reservoir. Otherwise the inverter may overheat and fail.
     
  5. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    Hi guys. Here's an update. I continued the bleeding process with no luck. I tried experimenting by letting the coolant drain out through a tube connected to one or the other bleed valve while filling at the reservoir. Still no luck. I replaced the pump with one from eBay. I got some air out again but still wouldn't show me the flow in the reservoir.

    Eventually I got frustrated enough that I thought I would get the Uview AirLift tool that puts a vacuum in the system and then sucks the coolant in. It was 100 bucks on Amazon. I saw a 60 dollar version too. I looked on Harbor Freight and saw a 40 dollar version. That was my language. I had my friend stop at the HF store on his way up one cold Sunday. OUT OF STOCK! At that point I was frustrated enough that I scrounged around the garage and home depot for parts and made my own vacuum sucker. We used that to fill it up, and then also did the standard bleeding procedure (althought I had hoped the vacuum technique would eliminate the need to bleed). Well, eventually it worked. We finally saw that little "step" of fluid on the inlet side of the reservoir. I just drove the car around for about a half hour. I think I'll be able to get it through inspection after I replace a couple turn signal bulbs.

    Here's the next problem...

    The steering wheel jitter. I know this car is not eligible for any steering stuff through TSBs having asked at the dealer. I don't think it ever received any steering service in the past either. I can say that the jitter only happens at low speeds - like when pulling into the driveway or away from a stop while turning. Sometimes a subtle jitter warns of a more serious one, but usually it starts right in with a very startling back-and-forth rattling. At one point I was able to take my hands off the wheel with the car stopped, and it kept right on shaking. There are no symptoms above 5 or 10 MPH. I saw on the TechInfo site that replacing the rack is a huge endevor. Has anybody on this forum (or another) done it themselves? Is there any sense in buying a used part? Might there be a way to fix this without replacing the rack? Would you guys trust an independent mechanic for this job? What else should I be asking? Well as always, you guys are a great help, and thanks for your input.
     
  6. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    My experience also was that the symptoms could be most severe with the wheel lightly gripped or hands off. In a way, the car has been training me to be more consistent with a good two hand grip--and I really haven't noticed any jitter for a couple of months now. It may be that weather has some effect, or some dirty spot in the transducer got cleaner with normal use, but I have a pretty strong sense that my grip change contributed to the improvement.

    I don't think that would appeal to me, just because of the effort involved in making the swap; I'd be pretty averse to the risk of having to do it again soon.

    I did discover a remanufacturer though. I have not seen reports from anyone trying that rack, but galaxee reported good experiences with Cardone in general.

    The information in the manuals suggests that the transducer is nothing more than a mechanically linked pair of variable resistors. The common opinion about the problem is that the contact area between the resistors and movable wipers gets noisy (because oxidized). I got weird readings trying to measure the resistance of mine, which could mean it is really something more complicated than just two pots--but could also mean it's just two pots with pretty bad oxidation. I haven't made any further effort to be sure.

    If the two-oxidized-pots picture is correct, it might be possible to use a circuit idea I had a while back, to build a box that could attach at the ECU behind the glove box and condition the signal. If it turned out unable to make an already-bad rack usable again, it might still be able to greatly prolong the life of a new or remanufactured one. One of the objectives is to maintain a constant small "wetting current" across the pots' wipers, an established technique for keeping oxidation down. So far I have not tried this circuit, and nobody else on PC has critiqued on it, so it's just a raw idea at this point.

    I haven't thought much recently about it, since I haven't been having the problem lately.

    How did you make the homebrew vacuum refill? I've been wanting to brew one myself.

    Regards,
    -Chap
     
  7. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    Rather than tell you all the ways I tried to do the vac refil that DIDN'T work, I'll jump right to what I should have done first. I got a universal cooling system checker kit on loan from a local auto parts store. They have a cone-shaped adapter that fits into the reservoir hole. I attached a light-duty vacuum pump to that via silicone tube. Once I saw that the coolant hoses were pretty well collapsed, I figured that was enough vacuum. I pinched the tube with vice-grips and removed the end at the pump. I then put that end in the container of coolant, and unclasped the vice-grips. In wen the juice.

    My jerky steering wheel is erratic and startling enough that I'm not really comfortable letting my wife deal with it, so I'm looking for the cheapest solution. I wish I could just turn off the power steering altogether and just turn the wheel harder at low (and no) speed like on pre-power steering cars.

    Also, my key fob stopped unlocking the doors remotely. I replaced the battery. Still no luck. How can I get it working again?
     
  8. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    I guess you could just unplug the torque sensor at the ECU behind the glove box, and substitute 4 fixed resistors:

    Code:
                 Vref
    
                 _|_
        750    _|   |_    750
             _|       |_
      VT1  _|           |_  VT2
            |_         _|
              |_     _|
         750    |_ _|    750
                  |
    
                 gnd
    
    ... run the ECU's zero-point calibration, and call it manual steering.
    No assist, and probably no warning lights.
     
  9. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    I haven't looked at said plug yet, but is there a plug for the steering independent of the other connections? Maybe I could get a plug of that type to make the "dummy load" you are describing. Anybody have pictures of this area?
     
  10. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    The plugs are custom so you'll need to do something special. I haven't done this, yet, but you could cut the wires and put in a small, standard connector for those signals. Then you can slip in a spoof circuit or resistor network of your own design.

    Bob Wilson
     
  11. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The Electrical Wiring Diagram is your friend here; you can order the bound paper version from the Toyota MDC at 800 622 2033, or spend $10 for a one-day subscription to Toyota's Technical Information Service online and view the same thing as a bunch of PDFs. The bound copy's about $47 (which to me was a bargain compared to futzing with the braindamaged javascript at the TIS).

    The 4 torque sensor wires do arrive at the ECU in a single dedicated 4-pole connector. The wiring diagram has a section at the back with connector part numbers, and your dealer can use the connector part number to look up the terminals that go in it. At the parts counter they will only sell "repair terminals" which have a few inches of random-colored wire precrimped to them, at about $6 a piece. Of course you can do a nicer looking job for less if you know somebody on the mechanical side of the dealership, who has the box of plain terminals, which they don't tell the parts people about; then you just crimp them yourself onto the wires of your choice.

    For some reason the practice of having plain terminals for the dealer mechanics but not orderable as parts seems to be universal; it took me about 3 years of owning the previous Ford to get on the right side of a mechanic who would admit to knowing where the box was, and I'm still not there at the local Toyota dealer....

    You could buy a housing and 4 terminals and make your own resistor network to simply plug in, or just buy the terminals and reuse the connector housing from your wiring harness, by releasing the 4 terminals in it and taping them.

    -Chap
     
  12. Hokie-Dave

    Hokie-Dave Member

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    I actually just bought a used rack and pinion from Car-Part.com--Used Auto Parts Market and had an independent shop install it. Book time for that job is 4 hours, so take their rate and multiply it and you can figure out what that should run + a front end aligmnent. I found a used one for $350 and paid $360 for the install plus an alignment.

    The dealer quoted me $2,100 for the job including a rack. ($1,200 at your local autoparts store).

    dave

     
  13. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    Great info Dave. Thanks. I just ordered a used rack on eBay (item: 290274690312). I was planning to round up a crew of guys and try it myself, but maybe I can get a rate as good as you did from my local independent guy. I'll check with him first. I am currently borrowing the complete set of manuals.

    Chap - I would still like to temporarily try the resistor plan to disable the power steering until it's time to do the rack job. Being a little electrically dimwitted, let me just see if we are on the same page with the resistor network. I can take 4 resistors from radio shack. What would I ask for? 750 Ohm? KOhms? JiggaOhms?... How about watts? Is that something I should know about too? I'll take my 4 resistors and connect them in a square shape with a female spade connector at each corner. I unplug the torque sensor plug from the emps-ecu and replace it with my resistor network, cross my fingers, turn key. Sound right?
     
  14. Hokie-Dave

    Hokie-Dave Member

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    Don't forget to swap out that right tie rod. And as I said, the book rate is 4 hours for that job, and I think they had my car done including an alignment in 4 hours when they did it last week, so a competent shop can make some money off the job even if their rates are reasonable.

    They offered a lifetime warranty on the rack for that price also? That was a great deal you got on it. My only fears with the used rack is that it was from a 2001, which was the year that they issued the extended warranty on, but I don't think you can go wrong with that price if it works, unfortunately the only was to find out if it does work is by installing it.

    Keep us updated on the progress.

    dave


     
  15. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Well, once we get past the necessary disclaimer that I Have Never Done This Myself And It Is Only What I Think Will Work....

    Yes, 750 ohms. Don't worry about watts, the ECU supplies a regulated 5 volts here which will make a current around 7 milliamps; the smallest resistors you'll find will be 1/8 watt and you won't come near making those warm.

    You probably know this, but the "square shape" in my drawing only represents the way to connect them electrically - the actual shape you end up with can be whatever compact arrangement you manage to origami them into. The resistor leads will be uninsulated, so once you've connected them you will want to insulate the whole schmear in a way that protects them from shorting to anything else, or to each other between the connections you made on purpose. Dipping the whole works in a can of Plasti-Dip is one of my favorite methods.

    For "spade connector" you'll want the exact terminals that are used in the Toyota connector. You won't find those in boxes at the auto parts mart, but you can pay a handsome price for them at the dealership.

    Because resistors aren't perfect, this will probably give you a zero-signal that is close to but not identical to the zero signal from your steering rack. The ECU has a set-up mode where you tell it "look, this is zero". If you don't do that it will probably want to constantly "assist" you off to one side.

    The fast way to say "this is zero" is to use the special Toyota hand-held scan tool. There is a way to do it by wiring a temporary LED indicator to the steering ECU and some nimble fingerwork with jumper wires at the DLC3 diagnostic plug by the driver's knees. I recommend looking it up in the manual because if I try to describe the procedure you'll be convinced I'm pulling your leg.

    Another place you can put the needed temporary LED is on the instrument cluster; I permanently attached one there just to not have to futz with it. I think earlier in this thread I linked to a thread that shows it.

    -Chap
     
  16. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    Hey Guys - I can't believe it didn't occur to me to just skip the resister network and merely unplug the emps plug from the emps ecu. I'm not worried about the warning light in the short term. I just want to drive the car until the installation of the replacement rack. So far, so good. Steering is a bit heavy, but probably not the heaviest I have driven...
     
  17. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    VICTORY!! -

    I had my local independent guy install the rack for $315 including tax and the tierod swap. Everything works great. Now, I'm at the point where I can relax and just focus on preventitive maintenance. Although I spent some stupid money towning the car and buying parts I didn't need, the actual cost of getting this car back on the road was:

    315 for labor
    about 50 bucks for a new pump
    33 for fancy toyota coolant
    150 for a rack
    100 for an inverter
    a lot of cold weather driveway time
    ________________________________
    $648 on top of the $4000 purchase price - not too bad.

    Anybody wnat to by my extra battery?

    Guys - thanks so much for you help.

    Now I should start learning about ipod adapters, scan guages, AC inverters, hypermilling, etc...

    GW
     
  18. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Congratulations, GW; I'm pleasantly surprised to see the low prices for the steering rack and inverter. Glad to hear that your car is running well now.
     
  19. statultra

    statultra uber-Senior Member

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    So let me get this straight, in order to bypass the power steering issues you just disconnected the EMPS ECU? How hard was it to steer?

    what battery you selling the HV? if so how much u want for it?
     
  20. kuwona

    kuwona Junior Member

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    Statultra -
    I just replied on the motor inverter thread too, but yes I just unplugged it. With the power steering bypassed like that, the car is probably still easier to steer than most of the big-tire Jeep CJs I've driven. Maybe there is also some economy benefit to not using the steering assist motor? Anyway, I only drove it like that for a week before swapping out the rack for the eBay one. I highly recommend trying the unplg technique just to see what it's like. You don't need any tools since the glove compartment opens to reveal the EMPS ECU after removing the two little 1/4-turn post thingies. To do over again, I probably would have done the resister plan Chap and I talked about above and just had permanent manual steering with no warning lights on.

    Now I have leftover parts for sale on eBay...

    If anybody wants to poke around with my old inverter, it's on eBay right now for a penny - Item 300294170908

    eBay Motors: 2001-2003 Toyota Prius HV Inverter/Converter 01 02 03 (item 300294170908 end time Feb-22-09 12:03:54 PST)

    I'm also selling a good main pattery pack - item 300294161373

    eBay Motors: 2001-2003 Toyota Prius Hybrid HV Battery Pack 01 02 03 (item 300294161373 end time Feb-22-09 11:39:16 PST)