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A New Perhaps Better Way To Hold the Prius Up For An Oil Change

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by 2010priusowner, May 31, 2011.

  1. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Sounds like a good idea I bought some once and never used it many years ago it will be interesting to hear back how coating the saddles of the jack stands works out. Keep us posted.

    I am thinking of making a video of my Prius lifting experiences I am soon to engage in.
     
  2. DumbMike

    DumbMike Active Member

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    I didn't see this point being made, so I guess I'll ask:

    If these Rhino or other ramps work fine for you (I bought a similar set from O'Rilley), aren't they safer than using jack stands?

    I have yet to hear that the weight of a car has collapsed one of these ramps. Jack stands scare me if I have to crawl under the car. I'll only use jack stands if I'm working on brakes or changing a tire, basically working outside of the car.

    I have to admit that I was initially worried about whether the ramps would move forward as I was trying to get the car onto the ramps because I have a rather smooth concrete floor in the garage. But I had no problems.

    Mike
     
  3. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    As a former mechanic I have seen accidents with ramps, never with Jack Stands In the past I have seen guys crush vehicles by raising the lifts too high.

    Jack Stands tend to demand one sets them right. There are really two issues one I am being very picky with this Prius I really like it more than any other vehicle I ever owned the exception being my 1986 Toyota Celica GTS leather and power everything boy what a car! So I am trying to avoid jack stand induced damage but am really thinking of the ramps as the safety net should the stands slip.

    I used to use two giant blocks of wood but have no idea where to find such a thing now.
     
  4. dustoff003

    dustoff003 Blizzard Brigade #003

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    I got them for free from a buddy leaving the island. They are not plastic Rhino ramps and they are metal. There are a small plastic extensions to decrease the ramp approach angle for lower cars. Did you ever find your front and rear jacking points?


    Posted from my iPhone via the Tapatalk app.
     
  5. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Yes I did thank you very much for pointing them out I was not sure about the one in the front until I studied some pictures after you brought it up. I then lay on the ground with a flashlight and looked I am pleasantly surprised to see it is so close to the front.

    Only a little over a hundred miles or so till I hit the first 5,000 miles rotating the tires and changing the oil. Filling with Mobil1 0 W20. and a fresh Toyota filter. Call me old fashioned and yes I know the factory breaks them in but I still want to get the factory oil out and the best stuff in.

    Which raises the point how can the service interval be 10,000 miles even with fully synthetic oil it seems like a marketing ploy for sales and a way to take the burden off of an inconvenient truth these cars are expensive when it comes to oil changes.

    Yes the Fully synthetic oil is better but we are still creating combustion byproducts like carbon and acids that are being suspended in the oil that stuff still needs to come out. Unless filter technology has really become so much better in the last 10 years since I twisted wrench for a living.
     
  6. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    The rear jacking point is really far under there. Even with my medium duty 3-ton jack it's so far under that for the first portion of the lift you can barely move the handle.

    Also it's up pretty high so it helps to put a modest amount of pack on your jack cradle to reduce the jack's travel to first contact. I put a square piece of 2x4 on the flat, and a hockey puck on top of that. For the front jacking point I sub a hard rubber cradle for the steel dish style that came with the jack.

    For jack stand placement I've stayed with the rocker panel points at the rear, but on the front I've been experimenting with putting them under the main rails of the floor pan, near their front termination. Seems to work very well: more solid, less prone to slippage. The rocker panel points seem like a knife edge in comparison.

    There's some pics of those alternative front jack stand points here. It's a second gen I believe, but very similar:

    http://john1701a.com/prius/documents/Prius_Maintenance_Changing-Oil.pdf

    (I'll try to take a few pic's with ours, and quit linking to the above)

    It is worthwhile doing a dry run before you do the oil change: make sure you're able to raise the car safely, get familiar with the oil change door. It has 2 kinds of fasteners: worth marking the one different one before removal, to avoid mix-up.

    Also, don't open that door any wider than necessary: pull it open just enough, and tie back with string or something. There are lots of reports of it cracking.
     
  7. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Thanks for the good advice I look foreward to the pictures I plan on a dry run next weekend then the main event I will be sure to snap some pics and might try making a video.
     
  8. alfon

    alfon Senior Member

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    I have been using the Rhino Ramps for nearly 10 years to change
    oil on both our 2003 VW Jetta Wagon TDI and recently the 2010 Prius.

    Never had a problem and both vehicles cleared the ramps without
    incident.

    alfon
     
    1 person likes this.
  9. jorbock

    jorbock New Member

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    I've got to agree that the Rhino Ramps work well. I've had no problems with clearance driving up the ramps (the EV mode works well for this) or with getting the ramps positioned correctly or sliding. I give them a good kick to get them firmly wedged under the tire before I drive up. As was mentioned, the clearance under the car is tight but adequate for an oil change with just enough room to fold the door out of the way. I feel safer under the car with the ramps than with jackstands and they're much less hassle. Certainly for other work, jackstands are essential, but not for an oil change.
     
  10. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Hey great comment about using EV mode to go up the ramps. Thanks.
     
  11. ETP

    ETP 2021 Prime(Limit),Highlander HYB Plat,B52-D,G,F,H

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    I suggest you put a big sign on the steering wheel and oil cap that says "put oil in the car stupid". I had to do that at the Votec center where I use to teach in a prior life. I also did check lists and noticed dealers as well as Wal-mart were using checklists and calling out the steps these days. Lately I have tried to watch from a distance at the dealer parking lot as they change my oil.

    These guys are sometimes jail releases and or drop outs that got a Votec certificate/GED. Some of them are great mechanics and do excellent work. Just not all!
     
  12. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Yes exactly why I do my own work, and with a Prius I can just imagine someone not actually turning the car off. Last drop of oil drips out engine kicks on.

    Besides that if I feel the need to instruct someone on how to work on my car Or give them a check list chances are I should not be paying for them to do it.
     
  13. Insight-I Owner

    Insight-I Owner 2006 Insight-I MT + 2011 Prius

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    You should check with the dealer that you bought the car from. Mine came with a Mobil sticker on the upper left corner of the windshield, which probably means that the dealer fills the ICE with oil, presumably in this case Mobil 1 0W-20, since Toyota calls for 0W-20 synthetic and Mobil 1 is AFAIK the only 0W-20 Mobil sells.

    The best way to really know if the oil is good for 10K miles is to do an oil analysis. But if Toyota recommends 10K changes it seems likely that they have run tests themselves and found that it is good for >10K miles. Don't forget that the Prius' ICE doesn't run all the time and is lightly stressed when it does, both of which may extend oil life WRT miles driven.

    +1 on changing your oil yourself if you have a place to do it. One Honda dealer wanted to put 10W-30 into my Insight-I, which is supposed to get 0W-20, because that's what they had in their pumping system! When I went to another and asked for a synthetic change, they were going to put in 5W-20, claiming "that's all we can get". I drove to a nearby parts store, bought Mobil 1 0W-20, and prayed that they actually put it into the car. Now I do my own changes in the Insight. But since I got free service with the Prius I'll take it to a dealer I trust (is that an oxymoron?) until the 2 years of free service is up.
     
  14. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    All I would assume from the above is that someone put a sticker on the windshield.

    All I would assume is their lawyers told them they could get away with it, for duration of the powertrain warranty.

    Definitely.
     
  15. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    I did a dry run today as another member recommended earlier in this thread.

    :mod:

    I took allot of pictures, and contrary to what others have written I did not find it unsafe to jack my car all the way up and lower it onto Jack stands and ramps to a lesser degree as a safety net.

    Please follow this link to the album I created ( Oh and the 3.5 ton low profile jack is one of the best I have ever used Cannot recommend it highly enough super easy lifting super lowering control)

    Album link

    PriusChat Forums - 2010priusowner's Album: How I Lift My 2010 Prius for an oil change
     
  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Thanks for the pic's! The front jack stand placement is where I most recently placed jackstands, works very well. Suggestion was from www.john1701a.com. Good idea putting ramps as a safety net: I use spare tires similarly, right now, but I'm thinking to look up wheel cradles (or even just make some). Basically ramps without the ramp part, LOL.

    If I was shopping for a jack I'd look your choice up. I picked one up on cheapy boxing day sale, a 3 ton. It's very touchy for lowering, but ok once you get the hang of it.
     
  17. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Google search wheel cribs they are on Amazon also. Yeah I really love this Jack.. You can not see it from the pics but it has a double piston set up. It was not too expensive either.

    What I did was lower the car on the ramps looked for signs of too much sideways movement stressing the ramps, then when satisfied they were stable jacked the car back up and placed the stands.

    The stands allow for more height and do not keep the tires from contacting the ramps, again the ramps are just there as a safety net I would never just use ramps alone or Jack-stands alone without something to catch the car in a worse case scenario.

    The placement was rather intuitive once I had the car up far enough to see. I reached under and made sure the Jack Stand cradles would not contact any thing other than the frame.

    NOTE: Anyone doing this must make sure they do not get close to the plastic shielding it has high voltage cables running through it putting the car down on electrical cables will ruin your day.

    Well more next weekend I will be doing the tire rotation and oil change more pics to follow.

    Oh by the way do the plastic wheel covers need to come off to pull the wheels or just zip them off with the air gun and protective thin wall sockets? I forgot to look.
     
  18. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    One thing to keep in mind about wheel cribs: they are under sprung components. If your jackstands fail the car will come down and the springs will compress before it's fall is arrested.

    Also, the few times I've settled the car's wheels onto something similar I've noticed: as the wheels are dangling free they're a little closer to the car's centre, then as they start bearing on whatever's below and compressing the suspension, they move outwards a bit. Something similar happens with a pair of jackstands, but maybe not as pronounced.

    If it works, car on jackstands, and the jack left in place, just backed off so it's barely in contact, is quite a good safety net. The downside: the jack can be in your way a bit, or really in the way if you for example want to take the entire engine cover off.

    I don't always do it (I should), but I think jackstands supplemented by something very solid and squat under the rocker panels(cannot tip over) is best. I've used mainly a stack of two snow tires under each rocker panel (or the summer tires, depending on the season).

    I've also used a steel toolbox that I just push under, back a little past the engine zone, centrally under a main sub-frame component. I'm a little suspicious of how well the latter would stand up with the car's full weight on it.

    For a better safety net, I'm thinking to cobble something out of (say) 2x12's: just screw together a stack to make a rough cube of wood, and tuck them under at the rocker panels. Save wear and tear on the snow tires. Or pick up a pair of those cradles, but just tuck them under the rocker panels.

    Regarding your wheels: I think you can put a socket through the covers, judging from the pics I've seen. I've got the 17" wheels, so not sure. The cover can just be pulled off with your hands I believe, less damage prone than prying with a screw driver or what have you. Me, I'd take the covers off anyway and clean/inspect.

    Official lug nut socket size is 21mm. I went with 13/16" (6 point) which is slightly tighter, and it worked ok on the lug nuts. But then when I tried to put it on the locking nut socket I found it would not quite fit. I ended up filing that socket down slightly, till the 13/16" just slipped on. If I had it to do again I might go for the official 21mm.
     
  19. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Good idea while I was cleaning out my storage areas I found some old hurricane straps I bought, I have plenty of pressure treated 4X4 wood I can cut up bolt togother and use as worse case scenario catchers.
     
  20. 2010priusowner

    2010priusowner New Member

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    Update just did the first oil change at 5,035 miles Toyota has lost their corporate mind that oil was DIRTY! And stinky! Glad to get it out of my crank case!

    The oil door flap what ever was very easy to get out of the way 3 little push pins two were the same size the third was a light color and larger.

    Oil drain plug easy to access, the washer from the factory was stuck but good had to give it the old fist and flat blade treatment to remove it, Lord only knows where it shot off too. Replaced it with a fresh one.

    Oil filter was a cinch with the tool from Amazon, so armed with the right tools torque wrench and some Mobile 0W20 it was very easy to change the oil.

    Did a tire rotation also using lift point front and rear and the spare tire a little extra work pulling the spare twice and jacking the front and rear more often but with my awesome jack air compressor air gun and torque sticks all relatively easy.

    Oh yes thanks to the wife I found a new way to clean my drain pan after collecting the nasty old oil, I just threw the cat litter she brought me into the pan and walked away from it came back later with a broom worked it around and used a rag to collect the litter clean and dry as new.