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Can starting in EV mode be dangerous?

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by windstrings, Feb 17, 2006.

  1. windstrings

    windstrings Certified Prius Breeder

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    Hey Galaxee, Ill trade you my Ev notice for your snowflake! :p
     
  2. rposton

    rposton Member

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    I noticed my 06 gives that pop-down window whenever outside temp. changes.
     
  3. galaxee

    galaxee mostly benevolent

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    your mfd for my instrument cluster? sure. :lol:
     
  4. windstrings

    windstrings Certified Prius Breeder

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    :lol: I would actually rather have the snowflake than a momentary alert that I may not even notice..... at least the continuous snowflake continuously reminds you that you are under 37degrees.

    I know it annoys some people who have to look at it for months at a time, but still it serves its purpose... I've driven my car for 18 days now.. I just noticed the drop down screen for my first time 2 days ago. True, it hasn't been cold enough here for all of those days, but it has been for about the last 5 days.. I should have seen it sooner.
     
  5. sub3marathonman

    sub3marathonman Active Member

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    Thanks for the welcome, windstrings.

    Your point about using EV to "pre-warm" the ICE is something I've never thought of. I didn't think that pump started until the ICE started. So it is always good to learn something new.
     
  6. windstrings

    windstrings Certified Prius Breeder

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    Well join the club.. I'm still learning too!.... I am making an assumption based on something I didn't know but Frank mentioned:
     
  7. V8Cobrakid

    V8Cobrakid Green Handyman

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    I guess the original worry is about oil not being up in the engine? Since the prius does not have a starter.. it has a huge electric motor that spins it up to speed. (people have mentioned this).. since it's turning before it fires.. ( about 1400rpms ) everything has the oil it needs.
     
  8. sub3marathonman

    sub3marathonman Active Member

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    I thought about that for awhile and happened to read about the work of a fellow Prius owner, hobbit, and the website http://techno-fandom.org/~hobbit/cars/ect/.

    He made a temperature guage to monitor the engine temperature. He said, "One of the most fun things about this is watching the head temperature bounce upward as the stored coolant is pumped back in from the thermosbottle at startup. If the engine is prevented from starting [by shiftingto Neutral or hitting the EV button], it is obvious that the recovered heat rapidly dissipates into the rest of the block. So it is actually best to let the engine start when it wants to, right after the pump cycle when the *cylinders* are maximally preheated -- emissions are likely to be lower as a result. Continued warmup will heat the rest of the block anyway."

    So I would say that it is important to start EV mode immediately and stop the "hot coolant" from the previous time being pumped into the engine. (I'm not 100% sure that EV immediately stops that pump though). I didn't think about how the coolant immediately heats the area around the cylinders, and then as time goes on that heat is dissipated into the rest of the block. I thought it would continue to heat, but apparently there isn't enough residual heat stored to do this.
     
  9. hobbit

    hobbit Senior Member

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    Said fellow owner is right here, hi. The hot stuff from the bottle
    is pumped in immediately upon power-up to READY mode, giving no
    opportunity to switch to EV before that happens. So a downside
    of EV is that you *lose* the bottle contents' heat unless you let
    the ICE take advantage of that pre-warm condition about ten seconds
    later. Trying to prevent normal ICE startup by waiting longer lets
    the heat dissipate away, effectively giving you a colder startup
    when you finally let it ... so really, it's better to let the car
    do it on its own timeframe because that really is at peak heat
    where it counts.
    .
    What I haven't tried yet, I don't think, is going to IG-ON, invoking
    EV, and then going to READY. I'm not sure it would even work. Now
    that I've said this and I'm not planning to drive anywhere today,
    someone else may beat me to the experiment.
    .
    _H*
     
  10. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    There's a relatively small amount of hot coolant stored in the thermos, and a cold engine block is going to absorb and dissipate that heat relatively fast.

    I still say you are better off letting the engine start immediately (unless you are going to be moving the car a very short distance - which is one of the few Toyota-approved uses of the EV switch in countries where it is standard), and then, once the engine is warm enough to permit EV use, use it the same way the car would do if it was warm (slow speeds when the SOC is high) or to draw down the SOC before a long downhill which will recharge the battery.

    I never use EV to draw the battery down below 4 bars, which seems to be around where the car itself likes to keep it. I.e., I use the EV to help the car do what it normally does itself, and I assert that this is the wisest use of the switch.

    You will probably get worse mileage if you try to drive long distances in EV or you think of the Prius as an EV that you can coax more distance out of before the engine comes on.

    Even when I draw down the battery (to 4 bars) at the end of a trip, I do it by forcing EV mode only at slow, steady speeds. I use the engine to accelerate after a stop, then go back to EV. You can go a goodly distance this way, letting the engine do the hard work, and using EV to maintain speed on the steadies. This is what the Prius was designed to do, and it saddens me to see people coming up with far-fetched schemes, like driving the first mile entirely in EV and then letting the engine start when the battery is at a minimum. Doing this you are working against the car, not with it.
     
  11. hobbit

    hobbit Senior Member

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    I finally got to try the above-detailed experiment [variants of
    EV-before-READY]. Doesn't work. The EV button is completely
    ignored until you're in READY mode, by which time the coolant is
    already pumping [if it's going to at all, that is] and you've lost
    that little bit of storage unless you let the ICE fire up fairly
    soon thereafter.
    .
    Now, why it *doesn't* pump at all in really cold weather remains
    a mystery. I *know* it's got something greater than ambient
    stashed away in there, and for normal non-EVB startups I wouldn't
    mind having whatever it can give me around the cylinders instead of
    thrashing the poor engine from dead-cold. This seems like sort of
    a design flaw... various attempts to squeeze hoses and move warmer
    bottle contents closer to the outlet thermistor haven't worked to,
    um, "stimulate" it, either.
    .
    _H*
     
  12. sub3marathonman

    sub3marathonman Active Member

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    I'm wondering it would be worth it to put a switch so somebody in EV mode could postpone the coolant pumping from the thermos.

    Also, how warm does that thermos actually get the engine, and how quickly does it cool back down to where it was? It seems hobbit has done the research, so hopefully he can post that information. Is the thermos really that big of a deal?
     
  13. windstrings

    windstrings Certified Prius Breeder

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    ken, you have been silent about some of these issues. Since you are in Japan, can you tell us whats up with the EV switch there?
    Does toyota warranty the batteries on cars bought in Japan and if so, for how long?

    I have been trying to figure out the exact reason the switch is not engaged in the US?

    I assume its because of our fears about plug-in and they didnt' want to send the wrong message and keep things simple.

    can you elaborate?
     
  14. windstrings

    windstrings Certified Prius Breeder

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    Its a tiny pump that pumps it, thats why it takes a little time... there is only little power expended to move it back and forth.
    I think it may be wise to posepone it for a while, but if its cold outside, it may cool down too much as the metal of the engine convects with the cold outside air and be not worth storing.

    I remember reading somewhere that it can hold the coolant above 200 degrees for up to 3 days or so.
    thats just a vague recollection..... maybe only 2 days?...
    I do notice on a warm day, the engine runs far less when getting started than when its cold.
     
  15. Frank Hudon

    Frank Hudon Senior Member

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    I'm pretty sure if you put a switch in the pump circuit to stop it till you were ready to kick it out of EV that it would set the CEL or possibly the MIL. The computer keeps pretty good track of temps and time, and the delay on start up is so the pump can charge the head with hot coolant from the thermos. If it didn't see the rise in temp vs what it sees in the thermos, it would complain. Probably the code for no coolant transfer what ever it is.
    Edit: I said "what ever it is" so I don't have to look it up in the ESM.
     
  16. hobbit

    hobbit Senior Member

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    Depending on how long it's been shut down and how cold the weather
    is [and how windy], I've occasionally seen coolant temp go from
    below freezing up to 50 C from the bottle, and then the engine
    fires up. That's an ideal scenario. Gain will naturally be less
    the longer the whole system sits in the cold -- and apparently if
    it sits long enough, it's not worth pumping coolant at all.
    .
    If I prevent the ICE from starting after the pump cycle, by EVing
    or shifting to neutral or whatever, that recovered temp rapidly
    drops -- in my ideal example, from 50 C down to 20 C in maybe a
    minute or so. The coolant comes past the temp sensor and is sent
    right in around the cylinders and head -- but then the rest of
    the still-cold block immediately starts to rob that heat away.
    The crank bearings, for example, aren't going to benefit at all
    from this -- it's really to reduce emissions by starting with
    higher cylinder wall temps. Everything else will warm up eventually
    from the heat of burning fuel. It'll just take longer in cold
    weather.
    .
    _H*
     
  17. ken1784

    ken1784 SuperMID designer

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    Nothing new here.
    A wise use of EV switch prevents a loss of some fuel.
    An excess use will lose some fuel.
    We don't have the CARB requirement. :)
    The battery warranty is as same as engine, 5 years or 100,000 km.
    I believe it not a Toyota's decision, but the US government (EPA?) does not allow the EV switch for the EPA testing.

    Ken@Japan
     
  18. ken1784

    ken1784 SuperMID designer

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    Are you saying you know more about Prius than Toyota engineers?

    Please understand there is no place of market where both the thermo and EV switch are equiped.
    Also, the primary purpose of the thermo is to improve the emission data, not for reduce the the warming up time.

    Anyway, have you seen following presentation and the start condition of pump?
    http://john1701a.com/prius/presentations/2...entation_38.htm

    Ken@Japan
     
  19. alsgameroom

    alsgameroom Member

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    Ken - Am I reading this correctly? Are you saying the Japan and Euro models equiped with EV Mode from the factory do not have the coolant pump?
     
  20. Frank Hudon

    Frank Hudon Senior Member

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    and no bladder