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how do I turn on my heater??

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by little foot, Sep 28, 2008.

  1. little foot

    little foot New Member

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    When I go to Climate I just see air conditioning..... No where to press
    on the display for heater....

    What am I doing wrong!

    help !!!!
     
  2. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    Air Conditioning is better called "climate control"....just set the temp you want and turn on AC and the car will do the rest.
     
  3. 9G-man

    9G-man Senior Member

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    You are kidding, right?
    Just increase the cabin temperature.
    Lower left steering wheel control, or MFD Climate control page.

    Page 293-owners manual.
     
  4. V8Cobrakid

    V8Cobrakid Green Handyman

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    if it's cold out, i prefer 72 to 76 degrees :) the automatic climate control aka A/C keeps the cabin temp pretty well stabilized.
     
  5. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    This is not an uncommon question.

    Most people are accustomed to having to switch their home heating/cooling system from "Heat" to Cool" and back with the changing of the seasons. Most people are accustomed to cars that have little red and blue lines showing when the dial is going from heat to A/C.

    But like Evan said, the Prius' A/C is best thought of as climate control. It really does just hold the temperature you set. That's it: set it and forget it.
     
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  6. Nousheen

    Nousheen New Member

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    I am also unable to turn on heater in Prius 2010 please help
     
  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    on a 2010, it depends on the package and country. generally speaking, you have a fan switch that must be on at least low, then a temperature switch that you can set up to 80 degrees f, or high, which is the highest setting above 80.
     
  8. rodri9o

    rodri9o Junior Member

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    I have an 06. I either hit the up/down arrows on the steering wheel temp control, or tap the climate screen arrow up/down to the desired temp. Normally, I leave the AC feature off and the climate on Auto. I'll flip the AC on when it is raining/humid, or in summer.
     
  9. egg_salad

    egg_salad Active Member

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    He's right. It's counter-intuitive.

    Assuming the cabin temperature is below the temperature set in the HVAC system...

    If I punch the steering wheel button for "A/C Auto", heat is certainly generated. However, if I enter the "Climate" panel of the MFD, The "A/C" "button" is lit up, indicating the compressor is engaged.

    While I'm aware that in certain high-humidity situations it can be useful to engage the compressor, I live in a desert and it's never humid.

    When I want heat, I go into the climate panel and manually switch off the compressor. It serves no purpose.
     
  10. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The A/C button lets you control whether the compressor can be engaged. It comes on by default if you press A/C AUTO, so the compressor will be allowed to run if conditions demand. You can press it to turn the light off, meaning the compressor won't be used. But having it lit up doesn't mean the compressor is in use, only that it can be.
     
  11. egg_salad

    egg_salad Active Member

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    Ah, that is good to know... except that implies there is know way to know if the compressor is engaged. Can that be right??
     
  12. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    I think if the AC button light is lit, it's pretty much certain the compressor will be cycling on and off. Barring near-freezing temps? Or extreme low humidity?? Monitoring the AC compressor with ScanGuage (XGauge ACWatts), it would start and stop about once a minute, at varying wattage levels.

    The AC compressor can also run in a sort of "stealth" mode: if mode is set to heat/defog. Even with the AC button light off I would see the compressor cycling on/off, similar to above albeit maybe at lower wattages.

    Maybe it's specific to my Canadian 2010 model year, or 2010~2011 (pre mid-gen upgrade), not sure, but with mine: AC button does not light up with push of the Auto button. If it's off it stays off, and if it's on it stays on, when you push Auto.

    Again, as mentioned above, it may run (without AC button light glowing) if mode is set to heat/defog.
     
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  13. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    maybe they don't install heaters in pakistan
     
  14. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    probably do. We've been watching a lot of Turkish who-dunnit series, and sometimes everybody's bundled up, and there's slushy snow.
     
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  15. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    yeah, currently 47f in karachi and 67f in islamabad. in LA they call that COLD!
     
  16. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    This rings a bell ... maybe there was a thread where we even found a customizable setting (in some years?) for whether it comes on by default with AUTO.
     
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  17. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Yeah I like that AC behaviour: if I didn't want it on before, chances are I don't want it on next time I turn the system on. Status quo.

    Basically, I'd like a system where I could turn it on and it would restore all the settings as they were last time.

    And it's not quite there, by a long shot. It does maintain AC setting (at least on mine), but unless I'm mistaken the only way to turn on an "off" system is to hit the Auto button, and (like it's name) sets everything automatically.

    A specific scenario where that backfires for me:

    When the car is partially warmed, I find it'll shut the engine down at red lights, IF the heat/vent system is completely off *. So I'll do this. Then with green light I have to glance down (and I'm trying to navigate through an intersection too, so this is a distraction) and hit the Auto button. And then, since I've often got mode overridden to heat/defog, I need to glance down a second time (double the distraction), to hit the mode button, which (thankfully) seems to always go to your previous choice with just one button choice.

    I'm not enamoured with the 3rd gen Prius controls, basically tolerate and accommodate it. Would much prefer a tactile/ergonomic system, with easy-to-find and usable without looking dials and sliders. Base model Honda Fit is a good example.

    * Sometimes I can get the engine to shut down by just lowering cabin temp, maybe as low as possible. That's my first tactic.
     
    #17 Mendel Leisk, Dec 28, 2018
    Last edited: Dec 28, 2018