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Jump Starter Pack Recommendations

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by Timar, Aug 14, 2020.

  1. Timar

    Timar New Member

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    this is my first post, I have a 2013 Prius, just acquired in February this year.
    I'm guessing the 12V battery went dead this week -- dashboard light show, weird noises, then eventually, nothing.

    I tried jump starting with a portable battery last night, no luck. I called a towing service this morning and the gent gave me some advice 1. Never try to jump a Prius with another car (not good for the Prius) 2. My battery pack was probably not powerful enough, the Prius needs a lot of power to restart. 3. I probably don't need a tow, he is pretty sure it can be jump started, since the Prius doesn't (rarely) suddenly just go dead like that.

    I'm not mechanically inclined, so it's quite possible I didn't give enough time to charge with the portable battery last night.

    What portable jump starter pack do you recommend? My hope is to be able to zip out and find it at a local store today. I wasn't able to roll up my car windows last night. Also, please give me your thoughts on the gent's advice.

    Thanks!
    Timar
    - Los Angeles
     
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  2. Pluggo

    Pluggo Senior Member

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    Welcome to the best Prius forum anywhere. From my experience, jump starter packs are bad news. They’re not as strong as your car battery, and they only work for two or three years before their internal battery goes kaput. I feel you’d be better off borrowing a full-size battery and using jumper cables to get yourself to Autozone or someplace that will install a new battery for you. I am guessing yours may still be the original, and they don’t generally last more than seven years. Expect to pay around $200.
     
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  3. Grit

    Grit Senior Member

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    Of course, he has to say that. if we find another car to jump our prius, he won’t get calls from us and be out of business. If he was a real gent, he’d say don’t use your prius to jump start another vehicle.
     
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  4. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    I have one of the small lithium ones, fits in my glove box. I bought one of the smallest available. The guy who said the Prius "takes a lot of power to restart" was mistaken; it takes a lot less than a conventional car.

    On the other hand, if you are jumping because the car's aux battery has gone doornail dead (and who isn't?), you can find that a lot of the juice in the jump pack gets sucked into the aux battery before you get a chance to start the car.

    If you are in freezing weather or stuck somewhere you really do not want to be, you can minimize the chance of that by disconnecting the car's aux battery first, then starting with the jump pack, then reconnecting while the car is READY. You'll have to reprogram your radio presets and such, but if it was that dead, you were probably going to have to anyway.

    That goes against everything you may have heard about cars with conventional alternators and never starting them with the battery out of the circuit, but a Prius doesn't care much. Just be careful not to let loose cable ends touch the wrong stuff.

    Disconnecting the battery was way easier in Gen 1 and Gen 2 because the cable back at the battery could just be unplugged. Starting in Gen 3 you need to get a wrench and fuss with the clamp on the battery post.

    If considering any of the lithium packs, I would recommend some research to find out who were some of the original, most reputable manufacturers, and buying directly from them if you can, not from cheaper sellers even if the products are advertised as being the reputable brand. You can see reviews on Amazon where people received counterfeits of a major brand.

    Cheaply-built lithium battery gadgets are Roman candles, so I would be a little picky about one that will be in my glove box.
     
    #4 ChapmanF, Aug 15, 2020
    Last edited: Aug 15, 2020
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  5. GrGramps

    GrGramps Active Member

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    Are we assuming the traction battery has an adequate charge?
     
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  6. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Yes. Most of the time when somebody needs to jump-start a Prius, it's entirely because of the aux battery.

    Recovering from a seriously depleted traction battery is a whole other kettle of fish.
     
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  7. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    @Timar I would focus first on getting a charger, then jump starter. Jump starters are just for getting out of a jam.
     
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  8. Timar

    Timar New Member

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    Thanks, all of you. After my failed attempt on Thursday night using a borrowed, bigger jump starter pack, I went out to Costco yesterday and bought a 'TypeS' brand 12V Jump Starter (also a 8000mAh portable power bank). Nice and compact, and I got the car jumped this morning. Worked immediately.

    Funny how this wasn't a straightforward process at all for me, for someone trying to go 'by the book.'
    Couple of examples of my mental tussling over the correct (safe) method:

    I read my 2013 Prius manual and it says to connect the negative cable to a distant bolt. Not reachable with short cables, like the ones I have on my starter. Would have been nervous about connecting it closer were it not for seeing the point at the 50 second mark in this video


    (Note the argument in the youtube comments saying the video creator should turn on his starter AFTER connecting the clamps. The instructions for the first (bigger) starter I used said the same, whereas the 'TypeS' starter I used next stipulates turning on the unit, connecting cables to unit, then attaching clamps to the car part.)

    And there's this video-maker who says to charge the battery directly to prevent 'overload' when charging through the fusebox: @ 1min43s (and again later in the vid )


    All's well that ends well!

    @ Pluggo: thanks for the warm welcome! The previous owner replaced the 12v battery last year. Hopefully it'll last me a good long time!

    @ Grit: Yep! Good to know now it isn't true. And I'll have to remember it isn't ideal for the Prius to give the jump

    @ChapmanF: Thanks for all that info. So I'm thinking now the tow guy was probably was being disingenuous in emphasizing that his larger jump starter would do the trick. (Or maybe he was too polite to say it was his experience that I needed.) The good thing was, it gave me the confidence to try again with another jump starter. Yeah, jump pack juice dropped from 100% to 70%.

    @Mendel Leisk: Thanks. I gotta start learning about smart charging and trickle charging...
     
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  9. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    I usually clip to the jump point in the fuse box and to one of the nearby bolts of the inverter cover ... no problem to reach with my little pack's short cables.
     
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  10. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    For neg connection I've used the stud/nut (hold down for EGR valve), just to left of fuse box (as you stand at front).

    For a charger rec:

    CTEK 4.3

    Its just one of many, but it's worked well for me. We're low use, especially with COVID, and ours is hooked up more than not. By a long margin.
     
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  11. viviki tung

    viviki tung New Member

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    Jomgand JW401 is a 12V emergency car starter, portable charger, LED stable flashlight, smart protection system, 10W wireless charging five-in-one multifunctional portable jump starter. Jomgand JW401 jump starter is able to start 8.0L 12V gas engines or 6.0L 12V diesel engines, motorcycles, ships, snowmobiles or other 12V engine-driven equipment.
     

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  12. AW82

    AW82 Member

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    I have had a Halo Bolt jump starter for a year or so. It has a usb port, flashlight and even a 110 inverter built in. I've used it more for charging phones, etc while camping but it's a nice backup. The only car it's jumped is my neighbor's Prius V. Twice, because they won't listen to me and get a new 12v.
     
  13. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Just stumbling on this old post, I see I was wrong about that; Gen 3 also has an easily-disconnectable battery connection. It's the fat white one in the underhood fuse box.
     
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  14. xliderider

    xliderider Senior Member

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    Anyone have any experience with those jumpstarters that use capacitors instead of batteries?

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  15. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    Halo Bot! Works great! Jump started my Van several time... And a few other people's cars.
     
  16. jzchen

    jzchen Newbie!

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    My friend has a super capacitor jump starter: asked his wife to charge it up before bringing it to him, when he needed it. Because the charge dissipates kind of not immediately available when needed. The manufacturers say you can power them with the dead battery BUT the time it takes to do this is too long….
     
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