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2006 Rear Fan Blowing red triangle exclamation, red car exclamation, Vsc, circle with !, check engin

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by Kimberly Krejdovsky, May 22, 2017.

  1. Kimberly Krejdovsky

    Kimberly Krejdovsky New Member

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    Can you buy a battery at like an Autozone? Where else would you buy a battery rather than the dealership?
     
  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    try o'reilly's if you're looking for rebuilt. only the dealer will have new.
     
    #22 bisco, May 31, 2017
    Last edited: May 31, 2017
  3. fotomoto

    fotomoto Senior Member

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    Yes, it will most likely be the Doorman brand. It is a rebuilt-with-used-modules "new" battery with a warranty. Some have had good luck with them, others have been through multiple failures and replacements by them. You will have to do the labor or find someone who will help and also get your old battery back to the autoparts store. AFAIK they also won't pay for any labor to remove/install if it fails. Doorman will then take your old battery apart, toss the bad module(s) and use the good ones to build another refurbished battery.
     
  4. michaelAtSPG

    michaelAtSPG Junior Member

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    Kimberly - Did you end up swapping the traction battery, and if so did it work?

    I just got all those lights too - all at the same time, on startup on after cold weather. My dealer says the battery needs replacement (fine - it's got 240k miles on it). But I worry that if I replace the battery, some of those other lights (related to the brakes!) may still stay on...

    (I'll add that I just have a P0A80 code...nothing else)
     
    #24 michaelAtSPG, Feb 6, 2019
    Last edited: Feb 6, 2019
  5. Skibob

    Skibob Senior Member

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    She has not logged on here in over a year and a half. I don’t think you are going to get an answer.
    My guess is that she got rid of the car and moved on.
     
  6. michaelAtSPG

    michaelAtSPG Junior Member

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    Ahhh I guess I should have checked the date! (I'm always resuscitating ancient threads...)
     
    bisco likes this.
  7. Prodigyplace

    Prodigyplace Senior Member

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    There is a better solution now if you are DIY. @2k1Toaster here sells a kit of new cells for $1600 delivered that basically give you a new battery. The link is in my signature.
     
  8. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    As Prodigy said, the OP has ghosted us all. Luckily for you though, you don't have the same problems. The P0A80 is the basic "bad HV battery" code. If that's all that's ailing your car, a new HV battery is in order. New, being the key word.

    You should be able to clear the code and then keep on driving for a short time. Weeks to months. As time goes on the code will come back. Everytime it comes back and you clear it, it will come back sooner the next time. Eventually it will die catastrophically if you keep doing this. But as a stop-gap measure to keep driving for 2 or 3 weeks as you order a new battery, you should be OK.
     
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  9. michaelAtSPG

    michaelAtSPG Junior Member

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    Thanks @2k1Toaster - unfortunately, it didn't last even a few days...during a 15-minute drive, the engine went to very high revs, and the battery fan went on full blast. While on a highway.

    This car has a lot of miles on it, and I doubt it will pass its inspection in a year. I will likely get an aftermarket battery to keep me going for the year, then on to the next one. It has served me very very well!

    I'll post my experience here for you. Thanks for your comments...
     
  10. Prodigyplace

    Prodigyplace Senior Member

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    An aftermarket battery may very well not last a year reliably without leaving you stranded. All the other aftermarket batteries are bad repair jobs on somebody else's failed back. New replacement modules are not available.
     
    Skibob likes this.
  11. Skibob

    Skibob Senior Member

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    If you are going to do that any way could you just replace the bad modules yourself? Would be cheaper than a rebuilt.
     
  12. michaelAtSPG

    michaelAtSPG Junior Member

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    @Prodigyplace yes, it's true it might not last a year - but its no more likely to leave me "stranded" than my previous 240kmile pack.
    @Skibob yes, i could do it myself, with parts from elsewhere, but it always takes a fair amount of effort to do a task the first time, and due to the age of the car I'd rather put the risk of fixing a major component onto someone else.

    I ended up getting a greenbean replacement and will let you know how it goes. (The install was easy and efficient - they came to my location and swapped the batteries in less than an hour).
     
    bisco likes this.