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Prius Battery Replacement (GenII) Like you've never seen - NEW Cylindrical Cells

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by 2k1Toaster, Jul 17, 2017.

  1. 05PreeUs

    05PreeUs Senior Member

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    There are a GREAT number of dealers who hide from Hybrid repairs or simply provide outrageous estimates for same, in order to avoid them.
     
  2. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    Again are you saying they will not install a brand new pack in my 07 or they are reticent to sell the pack over the counter to someone who just walked in?

    This is a battery pack discussion is it not?
     
  3. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    My dealer does not hide from anything hybrid repair related at $150 an hour why would they.
     
  4. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    Some will install a new pack only if you buy it from them. You cannot buy a pack elsewhere and have them install it. You cannot just take the pack and install it yourself. And since the dealer price for any part is suggested by Toyota but can be set to whatever they want, that's one cause for the large price differences you see posted. That plus the shop rate and extras make the total cost variable.
     
  5. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    Thank you for answering that. That's pretty understandable from the dealers viewpoint. Why bother selling that expensive part if it may come back and they have no way to test it to see if you blew it up or not.
    all it takes is one knucklehead at one dealer bringing back a pack. Very heavy part a lot of paperwork.
    Every dealer in the network will hear about it.

    There's a lot of people who post here are into there pack and are clueless.

    So your diy kit toaster becomes more attractive.
     
  6. Sam Spade

    Sam Spade Senior Member

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    Given the details provided, this sounds more like an Alpha test or a prototype even.......which comes WAY before Beta testing.
     
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  7. edthefox5

    edthefox5 Senior Member

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    yeah Toaster how dare you lol.
     
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  8. BK310CH

    BK310CH Junior Member

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    Unfortunately, you don't appear to be very familiar with the Prius cooling system, the cooling system of hundreds of thousands of cylindrical cell based packs or airflow characteristics in either application. For your perusal:

    Prius Battery Replacement (GenII) Like you've never seen - NEW Cylindrical Cells | Page 4 | PriusChat
     
  9. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    when will these batteries be available, and what media/partners will you use to promote them?
     
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  10. kenoarto

    kenoarto Senior Member

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    Now wait a just one minute! Prius chatters have bought packs and installed themselves. Read the conversations about core charge refunds.
     
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  11. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    You miss the part where I said "some"? That includes my two local Toyota dealers though. And if you read just above as to what I was replying to, you'll see a valid expert installer was denied a hv pack from a dealer so went to another.
     
  12. ericbecky

    ericbecky Hybrid Battery Hero

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    Some of the time it is both.

    For sure there are cases where they outright will refuse to sell a pack over the counter. As I mentioned, this is exactly what I experienced last week. And I've experienced before as well.

    I have also seen times when some dealers will not install aftermarket packs. I gave seen dealers that will only install if the part is purchased through them.

    And of course there are times where I've seen the quoted repair price be so high (over $5,000!), that it sure seems like they would rather sell you a new car and have you trade in your car.
     
  13. ILuvMyPriusToo

    ILuvMyPriusToo Senior Member

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    Exactly, then they replace the battery on the trade at their cost and make another high profit sale . . .
     
  14. 05PreeUs

    05PreeUs Senior Member

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    Let's see, what do the Gen2 packs look like??? Hundreds of thousands of cylindrical cells or flat plates?

    Gen II Prius Individual Battery Module Replacement | Page 2 | PriusChat

    [​IMG]

    Damn, not very cylindrical are they????

    What is your goal in starting a flame war with the OP???? We see your point on the originality of the idea and parts, but it serves no legitimate purpose to flame him.
     
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  15. kenoarto

    kenoarto Senior Member

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    Perhaps this has something to do with you being a Prius repair shop and a direct competitor of theirs. This sounds more like the exception rather than the rule.
    Questions:
    1)Where have you found the least expensive, brand new dealer supplied HV pack in the midwest?
    2) How much did it cost?
    3) What is the cost of your (2 hour?) service to install a brand new battery in a gen 2?
     
  16. Lesk_The_Glut

    Lesk_The_Glut Junior Member

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    Hi 2k1 Toaster,

    I have had my 2006 pack out twice to replace modules, starting a bit over 2 yrs ago. It's time to play whack-a-mole again and I tire of the process. Funds are tight but I want to find a solution that will get me the biggest bang for my buck. I'm very intrigued by your product and am entertaining the idea of being one of your guinea pigs. I understand your reticence to divulge some information at such an early stage. However, such a large investment, with no guaranteed safety net, does spook me a bit. I have some questions that I hope you can answer. Please don't take them to mean that I'm being critical. As a potential customer, I'd be remiss in not asking.

    For the purpose of clarity, I will refer to "cells" as any one of the 12 units that go into a pack's 14 "modules".

    1- Regarding the omission of vents. Is venting not required in this application?

    2- If I understood correctly, you got Ceba to manufacture improved plastic parts and a different Chinese company, referred to as "my guys", to improve upon the cells to achieve 6.5Ah. Can you tell us the manufacturer of the improved cells? Are they compiling these cells into the 12 cell modules or are you doing that/having it done in the US?

    3- Much has been made of the failure rate of Chinese modules. I don't dispute the supremacy of your product over other Chinese units. In fact, I'm excited about the potential improvement. I've heard it said, though, that some may purchase something like 25% more modules than needed to have enough good units to build a pack. Have you tested a good number of these modules and determined a potential failure rate?

    4- If I purchase your kit and modules fail at some point, what will you charge for individual modules?

    5- Can you tell us how much cooler the pack temps are after the strenuous drives that you described, compared to a stock pack?

    Thanks!

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
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  17. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    The skeptic in me says that most of these stories are like this. Not just with hybrids. Go in and there is a multi-thousand dollar repair bill, but the dealer is willing to pay you more than they have convinced you the car is worth if you trade into a nice new shiny car. And people fall for it all the time unfortunately. :(
     
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  18. BK310CH

    BK310CH Junior Member

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    Based on the content of your response, it's clear that you don't comprehend what I'm saying at all. I accept responsibility for failing to communicate in a way you can comprehend. I will try again.

    If you read my sentence, you see three separate items:
    1) prius cooling system
    2) The cooling system of hundreds of thousands of cylindrical cell packs (Honda IMA systems)
    3) Airflow characteristics of those two configurations.

    1) the prius cooling systems is based on high plenum pressure with restricted outlet to produce high velocity flow between the closely spaced cells. It is designed with the narrow section thickness of the prismatic module in mind.
    2) the Honda IMA cooling systems have been plagued with temperature distribution issues and poor cooing even with blowers dramatically more powerful than the Prius, and they begin to manage temperature at lower trigger points than the Prius due to the thicker cells being hotter at their centers.
    3) Airflow around a cylinder is atrocious. If you click the NASA link that I provided, you can clearly see that large portions of the cylindrical cells will not be involved in convective heat transfer unless the flow is at VERY low speed (which isn't good for heat transfer either). If you take a cooling system designed for one thing (prismatic modules) and substitute something completely different with horrible airflow characteristics (cylinders) with a natural tendency to run at higher temperatures due to a larger section thickness (they are fatter), THEN you can't reasonably expect an improvement.

    It's not a flame war by any means. It's an open forum challenge for him to substantiate some of his baseless and illogical claims that have no function other than marketing - to encourage others to buy based on perceived benefit when none exists.

    To reiterate, I support the concept as an option for the community; however, there is NO objective EVIDENCE that ANY of the claims of superiority over the prismatic configuration are accurate. In fact, some of the claims are just pure nonsense that are made with the intent of playing down the dramatic differences. It's that simple, and that's where the problem lies.
     
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  19. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    Yep, good for a quick fix but that's about it.

    "No vents" is again a simplification. Venting occurs when the battery is overcharged for a prolonged period. If the battery is overcharged slightly, some excess hydrogen and oxygen gasses will be formed within the cell. Forming these gasses is how a NiMH cell charges. The water in the electrolyte separates into hydrogen and hydroxyl on the negative plate. The hydrogen goes back into the alloy. When discharging the hydrogen desorbed back into the hydroxyl making water again. Different reactions on the positive plate, but not important to this. If you charge the battery too fast hydrogen is created faster than it can be absorbed back into the alloy. A battery can take some that extra gas as the pressure increases. As the pressure gets too high, the cell explodes if there is no vent. A flat design like Toyota can take less pressure than a cylinder before deforming permanently. When this happens, the magic cannot be put back into the cell.

    Having said that, these cells do vent. But they are not controlled vents. Venting only happens during some time of catastrophic event. The HV ECU makes sure to baby the battery, that's why they last so long. On the Toyota cells, the extra hyrdrogen and some oxygen gasses go up the vents into the tubes and down and out the car. On these, the vents are designed into the "bump" ontop of each individual 1.2v cell. Each cylinder has a vent. But it is activated at higher pressure and the gas escapes into the main battery chamber, no special vent tubes. Since it rarely if ever happens on the normal cells, it should absolutely never happen with a cylinder. If it does, there is something else terrible happening and that is most likely one of the least of your problems.

    Ceba manufactured the plastic as in they contracted it to an outside plastic injection company. Moulds were modified as improvements, and Ceba's contractors used. I am being told they may use the improved parts in their kits now too. :)

    And yes a different Chinese company used different batteries to actually get 6.5Ah in a cell. I do not want to divulge the manufacturer at this point. First rule of East Asian business is keep your contacts to yourself. This battery manufacturer takes the cells, wraps them in the PVC skins, welds the ends of the row interconnects, and laser marks the tops. These are packaged and freighted to some space in a warehouse I use in China. Ceba sends the plastic-only kits to this warehouse. I have some people put it all in small boxes on a skid pallet, wrap it up, and send it out. For now I have been doing everything air freight since there are no restrictions for NiMH batteries in the cargo holds of planes like there are for Lithium batteries. Nothing is done in the US except for the final sale at this point.

    There are good Chinese manufacturers and cheap Chinese manufacturers. Just like the USA. Generally people buy Chinese made knockoffs because they can get them cheaper. China is not a cheap place, it has a very high standard of living in these industrialized areas. It is not the 1980's anymore. If you want cheap to buy, it is also cheap to manufacture, usually meaning cheap in quality.

    The batteries I get shipped to me are tested at the manufacture individually before sleeved and welded. The test process is a lot sooner in the assembly than at the end looking at individual modules. I have looked at quite a few of these modules in person and remotely. The wonders of the internet is a laptop with some lab eval equipment can be hooked up to hardware on the opposite side of the world and data can be had live. The failure rate of the modules should be low as they are pre-selected before being built as a module. Early cell failures won't characterize properly, won't be made into a cell, and wont end up in a car. It would have to be a cell that passed QC in a few places where it shouldn't have or suffered damage after manufacturing. These are not things that can be measured with such a small sample set.

    Cost is roughly $100/module at this point for a brand new module. Obviously if I have surplus ones from testing those would fit into a used pack better.

    On the stock pack, battery sensor #2 is usually the highest. And it is at the center of the pack... <cough><cough> When you get into the 50C range, you're cooking it good, and that's bad.

    On the strenuous runs, the packs get up to 50C. The fan is whirring as loudly as possible. The more relevant data is the time it spends superheated. On the stock pack basically once it heated up, it stayed at the higher temperature dropping a almost nothing on some downhills after fully charged. It would take a couple minutes of being parked and stationary before the fan would start to turn down from max rpms but it would keep running. With this pack it was easier to see where the pack gets hit because almost everywhere on the way down by halfway down the fan would audibly change lower. And on the way up, it takes a few seconds before it kicks on again.

    Now keep in mind, unless you live in the Rocky Mountains, you won't really have this type of environment. 6%+ grades at 80mph up and down. A few miles up, a few miles down, and repeat for a couple hours if you want. And of course some roads are 80mph then sharp braking to a 10mph switchback then back up to 80mph. The battery hates this.

    I can also get the temps up to max fan temps with high speed and hard acceleration driving. We have 75mph speedlimits in lots of places, again not "normal" for the rest of the country. And even the flat spots gain and lose 1000ft of elevation every few tens of miles.

    In normal city driving I noticed about 4C to 5C cooler temperatures for the same drives. But that doesn't really mean much. It means more in the extremes which is not which gets hotter but which cools down faster.
     
  20. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    As I've said many times, direct evidence contradicts what you're saying. You have done no such testing so maybe it is you you should go away until you do some research and testing. As far as I know, you're not one of the 3 factory owners in China with this system. I am fairly confident you are not me. That means you do not have any of these cells let alone any of these cells installed in a Prius and have driven real world miles with it.

    Out of the 2 of us, only 1 of us has real world miles and that is me. My evidence shows that your calculations are wrong. The many posts on here about the thermals of the pack (sensor #2 being higher) and the higher failure rate of central modules, also support my claim.