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2007 Prius nags

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by vbisbest, Oct 21, 2006.

  1. vbisbest

    vbisbest New Member

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    I have had my 2007 package 5 for 2 weeks now and I am enjoying the car so dont let this rant fool you. I am loving the 50mpg average I am getting. There are just a few little nags that tend to drive me nuts. Some of which have already been mentioned on the board, others perhaps lack of reading the manual is the cause. So here we go.

    Audio - Just pitiful. Terrible bass for such a "high end" JVC 9 speaker system. I have definatley seen this complaint from many people on this board so nothing new. I like the build in mp3 ability, but you can seem to randomize outside of the folder you are in. I suppose I could put all 130 somthing songs onto the root of the CD and forgo folders, but it just seems silly it cant do this. Also when in random mode, if you press the up or down buttons on the steering wheel, it does not go to the next random song, it just steps to the immediate song before or after the one you are on, no good.

    Seats - Again, said on the board a lot. If you have lower back pain like myself, this is probably not the right seat. Comon Toyota, for $28K, at least have a manual adjustable lumbar control, very frustrating.

    Nav - This is my first Nav control in a car so perhaps this is just the way they work. When you get into the suburbs, it give a long spiel about "turn by turn nav not available in this area". However, it feels it needs to tell you with every turn you make until you get back onto a main road. I had to turn the voice off because of this nagging. Now with the voice off, it would be a nice feature to still have the ding sound (the one you get with voice on) when your road approches, without this, you have to keep taking your eye off the road to see if you are at the right street. There does not seem to be an "advanced mode" for voice commands. When I press the VC on the steering wheel just ding and I can say "go home" or whatever. I dont need it to tell me everytime "at the tone, say the command etc....".

    EV Mode - definatley already mentioned. It would really be useful for me because I drive everyday on 285 in Atlanta which is basically a 6 lane parking lot that surrounds Atlanta. If you let to big a gap in front of you, cars jump right in and I cant give it enough throttle without the gas engine kicking in or the car behind me honking the horn and saying "move it granny!" because I am trying to feather it just right.

    Locks - Probably for saftey reasons the car does not lock automatically when leaving the car (Opposite it unlocking when you approach the car). But that would be a nice feature for those without kids.

    Again, I do like my Prius, it just the little things that add up. And there are probably answers to some of these that I dont know about. Your feedback and flaming is welcome :)
    Ray
     
  2. Sufferin' Prius Envy

    Sufferin' Prius Envy Platinum Member

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    Since flaming is allowed . . .
    Welcome to Priuschat, Ray!

    SOUND: JVC or JBL? :huh: To each their own with perceived quality of sound. Me personally, for best sound quality, I don't expect to hear it in a car. Even the low end model is good enough for most, considering the enviroment.

    SEATS: At first they seemed annoying to me . . . now I love them. Maybe you will 'adjust' too.

    NAV: You aren't the first to complain. Good suggestion on having a beep announce the next turn rather than the nag voice. (Sometimes Toyota reads these suggestions and does something with them . . . this is a good safety suggestion)

    EV MODE: Install the EV MOD.

    LOCKS: Auto locking a car with key fobs may lead to instances where the driver walks away thinking the car will lock itself . . . the Prius will not lock the doors if a key fob is left inside. That is why Toyota would rather you push the little lock buttons on the front door handles, on the hatch, or on the key fob. If there is a key fob inside, the car will complain, and Toyota is hoping you are paying attention, rather than just walking away.


    [This bit of civility will momentarily be interrupted with flaming . . . Nah, this is the Main Forum, not Fred's House of Pancakes. ;) ]
     
  3. vbisbest

    vbisbest New Member

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    Sorry, your right, JBL
     
  4. Renocat

    Renocat Member

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    The car unlocks just by approaching it? Mine (2006 pkg #7) doesn't unlock until I slip my hand in one of the front door handles or the rear hatch handle. :unsure:
     
  5. mootsman

    mootsman New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Sufferin' Prius Envy @ Oct 21 2006, 05:41 AM) [snapback]336042[/snapback]</div>
    I'm an audiophile and musician and I do a lot of listening in my vehicles -- so perhaps I'm not included in your "most" but I also find the bass to be lacking...not in volume per se but clarity.

    On the other hand, the seats work for me and I have a couple of blown lumbar discs. Our subie that we traded for the Prius was awful on the back -- guess it's a very individual thing. But would like to have adjustable lumbar.
     
  6. timg

    timg Junior Member

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    I was hoping they might have fixed the bug with the random mode when you're listening to a CD for '07 but I guess it's still there. That has always bugged the hell out of me.
     
  7. vbisbest

    vbisbest New Member

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    Quote: "The car unlocks just by approaching it? Mine (2006 pkg #7) doesn't unlock until I slip my hand in one of the front door handles or the rear hatch handle. "

    Right, the doors unlock when you slip your hand in the door handle. Didnt want you to think there was a new feature you didnt get. :)

    Quote: "'Im an audiophile and musician and I do a lot of listening in my vehicles -- so perhaps I'm not included in your "most" but I also find the bass to be lacking...not in volume per se but clarity."

    I agree, even a non audiophile should be able to tell. I really thought something was wrong and looked at t he amp under the seat to see if there was an adjustable crossover or something, but found nothing.

    Thanks for everyones input
    Ray
     
  8. narussian

    narussian New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vbisbest @ Oct 21 2006, 03:45 AM) [snapback]336040[/snapback]</div>
    I saw on a thread somewhere on this site that people disabled the speaker that sits atop the MFD. I did that and it seemed to help with sound quality a bit. although the bass is still horrible.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vbisbest @ Oct 21 2006, 03:45 AM) [snapback]336040[/snapback]</div>
    At some poin the memory of how comfortable the seats were in my Saab faded away and the Prius seats started feeling fine. Yet the drivwrs seat still bothers me as it sits too high up and I would like to lower it to better my view. But someone on here did that and I would never be able to fisure all that out. If you have a chance search for the thread, it is pretty amazing!

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vbisbest @ Oct 21 2006, 03:45 AM) [snapback]336040[/snapback]</div>
    Oh man, just wait until you are headed to an entered destination and as you are going 65 on the highway the lady's voice says "You have now reached your Destination" and you look over tot the side of the road as you fly by! I think there a quite a few problems with the whole navigation system in general, it is very ticky about how you enter information, It has to be at least 3 years behind on new roads and it is VERY general about the directions it gives you. And for me, it will often say veer to the right when it should actually say veer to the left. I swear, you never can tell {and some may say I am doing it wrong, I am entering wrong info, yada yada yada, but I have no argument for my experience)

    All in all it has been great to have my Prius. I feel smugger than ever driving by people in "cool" or "tough" cars knowing that they have no idea what a Prius stands for. Ignorance may be bliss, but smug is even better!! Enjoy!
     
  9. aaf709

    aaf709 Ravenpaw of ThunderClan

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(narussian @ Oct 21 2006, 02:39 PM) [snapback]336179[/snapback]</div>
    Some owners have improved the bass by installing a subwoofer.
     
  10. kdmorse

    kdmorse Member

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    but you can seem to randomize outside of the folder you are in.

    Press and hold the Random button (instead of just tapping it to turn it on). You'll go into an all random mode that will jump arround the entire CD, and won't be trapped within a particular folder.

    Other than that, all your points are valid. Each one bugs different people different amounts, for most folks they're minor annoyances at worst. Some folks can't stand the seats, some folks find them just fine. Some folks live in areas where the NAV system is dead on, some where it's near useless.

    -Ken
     
  11. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(aaf709 @ Oct 21 2006, 02:48 PM) [snapback]336183[/snapback]</div>

    Yeah, the two 'cheapest' mods are disabling the centre speaker and adding a subwoofer.
     
  12. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    Audio: I am just glad to have something to listen to.

    Seats: The thing I notice is that the leg:arm ratio seems odd. In order to have a good leg distance I have to move the seat back which moves me too far from the steering wheel. Or I move the seat up to reach the steering wheel and my legs feel cramped.

    NAV: I'd never had any sort of NAV before. I know that there are learning curves with every new thing we learn. Especially as adults. So I never thought twice about getting used to the Nav system. As for the voice and the warning bings: do the bings get equally soft when you turn the voice to its lowest setting? I'll have to look into that. Also, I believe that once you get accustomed to looking at the "distance to destination" on the left side of the screen, you will not blow past your destination ever again. And since the MFD does not make it a habit to regularly jump around in the car, you should know exactly where to look every time and do it quickly.

    EV: Using your EV mod on the highway is a really really really horribly terribly bad idea. I have the EV button mod with ten months of experience on it. Here's what will happen: you will use your EV for bursts of rapid acceleration and then suddenly stop. Then rapid acceleration and suddenly stop. Pushing the EV that hard through a series of dead-weight acceleration will rapidly diminish your HV battery SoC. Once you hit two bars, the ICE will kick in and run baby run. So now you'll be sitting in traffic, not moving, running your engine. The guy in the Tahoe behind you will be laughing because your hybrid doesn't even know how to turn its engine off and you will see your 50MPG average quickly and most definitely fade into memory. There are stories on this board about people complaining that their EV buttons have ruined their mileage.

    Locks: The Buick Regal I traded in had the locks that I could initiate when getting out of the car, allowed about fifteen seconds of door opening and closing, and then locked the doors after everyone was out. It took some getting used to that I can't press the door lock button until everyone is out and all the doors are closed. I'm not sure I would want doors that automatically unlock as I approach the car. I walk past Priapus on my way to get the mail and wouldn't want the doors unlocking and relocking just because I walked near it.

    I think it's good to constantly look for ways to improve things. In fact, it's that pursuit that has kept Toyota so good: Kaizen.
     
  13. vbisbest

    vbisbest New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(kdmorse @ Oct 21 2006, 05:53 PM) [snapback]336185[/snapback]</div>
    Perfect! 1 nag down, thanks!
     
  14. vbisbest

    vbisbest New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Tideland Prius @ Oct 22 2006, 12:01 AM) [snapback]336296[/snapback]</div>
    I just disabled my center speaker and yes it did make a difference for the better. It seems to give it a fuller range by taking out the excess mids. There is another thread that talks more about this and seems to have good results. This should hold me over till I can get a sub and replace the speakers.

    Thanks for the suggestion
    Ray
     
  15. bryanmsi

    bryanmsi New Member

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    I just picked up my 2007 Touring Edition Prius, and all I can say is WOW! I'm giving up a 2002 Mercedes for it, so you can imagine its one amazing little car to generate that kind of vehicle swap. Its really not fair to compare the Benz and the Prius, but since I can and I did, I thought I'd list some of my little niggles (and a few of the features which make the Prius a slam dunk).

    Not so great:
    -Steering wheel buttons are too dim; can't change illumination. Sure, they're no dimmer than other buttons like the window controls, but when you try to run half the car's functions from them, you had better be able to see 'em at night. In a normal brightly lit city night environment, they're practically impossible to read.
    -Its really hard to stay on electric power in normal traffic without the car behind you trying to drive into your trunk. A higher threshold of accelerator pedal before kicking in the ICE would go a long way here.
    -$50 worth of dynamat-type sound insulation in the doors would make the car seem $500 more expensive.
    - The cloth material for the seats feels, looks, and probably is really cheap.
    -No rain sensing wipers as an option.


    Love these:
    -Bluetooth integration to die for (multiple phone support, separate address books, steering wheel controls)
    -Leather seat material is very high quality
    -Amazing cargo capacity with seat folded down in back. Costco Run?
    -Backup camera rocks
    -Voice activation in Nav system is impressive
    -Smart key (usually you need to spend 2x as much as Prius to get this)
    -Coolant "thermos" bottle for speedy engine warm up and heater start
    -Stability control standard
    -8 Airbags
    -Heater and A/C for the battery pack
    -Personal information wipe feature is clever when you finally sell the car
    -A/C works on battery pack (try that in your Ford or GM hybrid)
    -Storage cubby under the trunk floor is surprisingly roomy
    -Storage cubby cover has its own prop rod
    -Under floor storage for the retractable cargo cover (this is just brilliant)
    -AUX Audio jack with 12v power 2 inches away in armrest (2007)
    -Steering wheel rim nice and thick

    Oh, and there is that little gas mileage thing....


    What a great car!!!
     
  16. Rancid13

    Rancid13 Cool Chick with a Black Prius

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vbisbest @ Oct 21 2006, 01:45 AM) [snapback]336040[/snapback]</div>
    Not sure if it's the same thing, but I have the JBL system in my 06 Package 8 and I've been quite impressed with the bass in it. I was recently sitting at a stoplight listening to some great music (Metallica) with the volume turned up to 35, and I kept feeling/hearing this very loud bass-y thump that was vibrating my car and I actually looked around to see what person nearby had their bass turned up so loud. It took me a minute to realize that it was me! :eek:

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vbisbest @ Oct 21 2006, 01:45 AM) [snapback]336040[/snapback]</div>
    I agree completely. Even my old '96 Saturn had a lumbar support lever, even if it was your basic manual lever. I miss that little extra bit of lower back support.

    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(vbisbest @ Oct 21 2006, 01:45 AM) [snapback]336040[/snapback]</div>
    I guess you could get the EV mod. I sit in a parking lot called the 405 freeway every afternoon on my way home from work. I haven't had anyone behind me honk because I was accellerating too slowly to the next stopping point yet, as I do try to milk the battery power as long as I can while moving with traffic below 40mph. Of course this gets me down to purple bars faster than if I were coasting along at higher speeds, but really, what can you do in gridlocked, stop & go traffic?
     
  17. bbianchi

    bbianchi New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Bryanmsi @ Oct 23 2006, 11:50 PM) [snapback]337216[/snapback]</div>
    Those three I have not noticed... care to elaborate?

    Do you mean the heater and A/C has a vent that blows on the battery pack?

    Where is this prop rod hidden?

    What under floor storage for the cargo cover?
     
  18. Anubis

    Anubis New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(bbianchi @ Oct 24 2006, 06:20 PM) [snapback]337708[/snapback]</div>
    1. Not sure about the battery's own blower vent. I only know about the vent opening between the seat back and the rear passenger side door which allows for the car interior's normal heating and cooling (set by the driver) to get to the batteries as well. (I'm in an '06 Pkg 8)

    2. When you lift the floor in back to get to the cargo storage area (underneath which is where the spare tire is located), you'll notice the little bar (which resembles a black under-hood prop) on the left (driver's) side. It doesn't really work for me unless I am lifting the whole floor (to reach all the way into the storage area) rather than only to the first bend of the floor cover.

    3. The prop rod also bridges over the slot the tonneau cover sits in. The cover will fit into the slot on the right and then (after moving the prop rod and spare storage cover out of the way) into the left slot. The tonneau will extend into the little storage space on the left as well, so if you have that jam-packed with stuff, you'll have difficulty getting the tonneau rod to fit in its slot. You can also lift the prop rod and insert the tonneau rod into the left hollow storage area and the left side slot and then snap down the right side into the passenger side slot so you don't have to remove the cover of that little extra storage space on the left.

    Also, if you put it in just right, the hard flap which remains out of the roller will lie flat and the prop rod will fit back down into it's place over top of the tonneau rod and then you can lay the floor back down flat again.

    Cool, huh? B)
     
  19. bryanmsi

    bryanmsi New Member

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    <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Anubis @ Oct 24 2006, 07:22 PM) [snapback]337751[/snapback]</div>
    We're both kinda right. The pack doesn't have its own heater or cooler, but it does have thermal monitoring and venting with dedicated fans to either cool or heat the pack with cabin air. The fan speed is controlled by computer.

    According to http://www.cleangreencar.co.nz/page/prius-battery-pack

    Battery Pack Thermal Management
    The purpose of a battery thermal management system is to keep the batteries operating within a desirable temperature range; prevent the batteries from exceeding a high temperature limit that can damage the batteries and/or reduce life; and maintain battery temperature variations to low levels to prevent highly imbalanced batteries. Pack imbalances can reduce performance and can also damage the battery and/or reduce life. Thermal management of the battery pack is typically accomplished with the combination of two approaches. First, a cooling/heating system is designed to extract/supply heat to the battery pack. Second, the battery controller adjusts the vehicle’s use of the battery pack based on the conditions in the batteries.

    Forced Air System
    The Prius supplies conditioned air from the cabin as thermal management for cooling the batteries. The pack’s forced air system consists of two vents located in the cabin under the middle brake light (exhaust from the cabin or inlet to the pack); ducting to the battery pack enclosure; the enclosure manifold; air gaps between modules; ducting out of the pack to a blower that pulls the air through the system; and two exhausts (one to the boot and the other to the outside). A hydrogen vent from each module is connected in series with tubing. Any gases released are exhausted from the vehicle through the gas manifold to avoid any increased hydrogen concentration and, thus, potential for explosion. Outside air is conditioned (heated or cooled) by the vehicle’s thermal comfort system to a level comfortable for the driver. This approach has the advantage of providing air that is not only comfortable to the passenger(s), but also ideal for use in heating or cooling the NiMH batteries. However, the Prius does not use the forced air for heating the batteries. To achieve a relatively uniform temperature distribution across the modules, a parallel airflow scheme is used, rather than a series configuration. In a parallel configuration, each module is set up to receive the same amount of airflow and thus the same cooling. To achieve this in the Prius, cabin air enters the pack through a plenum that runs beneath the battery stack horizontally from passenger side to driver side. The cross-sectional area of the plenum is largest at its entrance and linearly decreases as it goes under the modules. Then the air flows vertically through the gaps between each module (formed from dimples and protrusions on side walls). Finally, the air enters into the top plenum. This plenum’s cross-section increases linearly in the direction of the flow. With this design, the pressure drop across each module is expected to be uniform and, consequently, should lead to a uniform flow rate around each module. The air is drawn by a 12 V blower installed above the driver’s side rear tire well. The air is either exhausted to the boot or through a vent on the driver’s side C-pillar. The fan has four settings, depending on the maximum temperature of four monitored batteries. Toyota also monitors the inlet and outlet air temperatures. The fan settings are off, low, medium, and high speed. The blower setting depended on temperature and transitions with hysteresis depending on whether temperature is increasing or decreasing.
     
  20. Manksgloob

    Manksgloob Member

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    I've got one for the 2006 models that I know carried over to the 2007:
    ABC/QWERTY settings not affecting the phonebook (on bluetooth equipped models.)
    See this other thread for more details: http://priuschat.com/index.php?showtopic=19985

    And one that I sort of wish Toyota had included from the beginning:
    Remote Hatch release, or at least a way to open it for when the car has started, but I've run around the back to get something only to find that it's locked. With SKS, I do have the fob with me, but the vehicle ignores all button presses because it's already powered on. So then I have to run my lazy butt back to the driver's door so I can press the Door Unlock button.

    The hatch latch is already controlled electronically. Would it take too many more resources to add an extra button on the fob, and a circuit to authenticate/unlock/unlatch the hatch?