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2006 - P0a80 error

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by MikeSF, Sep 1, 2021.

  1. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    So yeah... I'm guessing 15 years the hybrid battery just isn't working much anymore. Noticed past few weeks some squirrelly things happening, like climbing up a hill (literally 2 blocks too) battery charge went from full to nothing, and then going down a couple blocks the other direction riding the brake a bit to charge up, poof full charge, also a noticeable delay when I hit the gas and feel acceleration. So this morning about to go out and grab the door handle, and nothing... no unlocking... great the other battery is relatively new (couple years old) so I'm not worried about that, pull out the key, put the fob in the hole, start the car... oh boy... big red triangle, check engine light, weird little other light (don't recall seeing), on the screen hybrid battery symbol too, engine tried to recharge the battery and in a couple minutes it was completely recharged (according to the screen)... so yeah I'm thinking something wrong with the hybrid battery. Torque told me P0a80 too, so yeah...

    So here's the question, what's my next step?
    Should I entertain the thought of fixing this myself? Get something like Dr Prius to actually check all the cells to see if perhaps it can be fixed on the cheap?
    Whole new traction battery? I saw a "local" place (PriusKing) sells them for $595 with a trade in of the old battery +$850 without old battery, or close to $1200 with a lifetime warranty.
     
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  2. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    Ok, so took a screenshot of what Dr Prius showed. Now on one hand, I felt partially at ease because it seems like 1 cell is completely off the wall. However after zooming in and looking at it shows 16.99V(?) on #3, but compared to 17.25V right next to it... so bottom line is I have no idea what I'm looking at here or if I'm even coming to the wrong conclusions, or how to use Dr Prius software
     

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  3. TMR-JWAP

    TMR-JWAP Senior Member

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    It is extremely likely you have a single failed/failing module in Block 3 (based on V and IR). For simplicity, if you think about battery capacity, that (failing) module is acting like a AAA rechargeable battery while the other 27 modules are acting like rechargeable D cell batteries. They can have the same voltage, but they have completely different capacities. Use those D cells on your favorite flashlight and it works just fine. Use that AAA battery in the same flashlight and it will be drained in just moments. Same thing on the charge side. Plug that flashlight into the charger with the D cell batteries installed, and it may take a while for it to fully charge. Use the same charger on the AAA and it will be completely charged very fast.

    That's what's happening inside your hybrid battery right now. That AAA battery drains super fast, so the ecu sees the rapidly dropping/dropped voltage and thinks the entire battery is low. Then it starts to charge and that AAA battery fills up very fast, now the car thinks everything is full.

    This is not saying there aren't other modules that are also weak, just that right now, block 3 (likely) has one that is weak enough to be causing codes.
     
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  4. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    and this weak battery would cause the big red triangle symbol and all those? Also would it prevent the fob from working remotely? Car does not detect it unless I shove it in the fob hole.
     
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  5. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    It would not be the cause of your fob issue; that would just be another thing to resolve.

    It would cause the warning triangle (lit directly by the HV ECU), and the ABS/skid/((!)) lights, because the brake/skid ECU will know the HV ECU has reported an issue.
     
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  6. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    Hmm, maybe time to replace the fob battery, I'll doubt check with the spare fob

    So would it be safe to drive in this condition? Just horrible gas mileage I'm guessing? I mean I moved the car from one side of the street to the other without much in the way of problems. But in the next day we're going to need two cars, the Prius won't have to go far but still.

    And an odd question, if I removed the hybrid battery would the car still run? Looking through some how-to videos and what not it doesn't seem terribly complicated of a fix just time consuming. But more to the point figuring out exactly what needs to be replaced and then waiting for said replacement while said car still needs to stay ahead of the street sweeper by moving to the other side of the street.

    Or should I just bite the bullet pay a considerably large(r) amount of money have a battery refurbisher swap out the battery and call it a day?
     
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  7. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    The car with the battery removed is a boat anchor. Among other things, that battery is needed to start the engine.

    There are plenty of threads here about replacing a few individual modules at a time, but that tends to devolve into whack-a-mole; the other modules you don't replace might not have given up the ghost yet, but they're 15 years old also. You eventually get very fast at taking your battery apart.

    The general opinion of "refurbishers" here has declined; such batteries might be better or worse cobbled together collections of other people's n-year-old modules.

    The highest recommendations on PriusChat these days generally go to: getting a new battery from Toyota, or getting a new one from NewPriusBatteries (also built out of new NiMH cells but cylindrical, looks different inside).

    The newest thing with quite some enthusiasm is an offering from NexPower that uses lithium chemistry instead, for a lighter battery with some advantages. Because it has only been out a couple of years and is a change of chemistry from what the car was designed for, it's still mostly early-adopter types who are trying it out, but reports seem to be favorable.

    As for how long you can keep driving with the P0A80, that seems to be hard to predict. The experiment may end with some bangs and bad smells from the back of the car at some inopportune time, but for some people that won't happen for quite a while.
     
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  8. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    Ok, took a look at some of those other battery places, lithium sounds cool, but a bit more pricey than NewPriusBatteries and about the same cost as an OEM from Toyota (now). They also allow me to keep the old battery, but what kind of resale is there typically an older battery? Better to strip it down for parts? Seems the cells go for about $20-30 on ebay, so could get some money back from that from people looking to refurbish (i.e. my original thought).

    The real question though is how long will the car end up lasting, being here in California I'm pretty damn screwed as far as replacing the catalytic converter since I can't use a 3rd party one. And I'd rather not spend $3k and help prop up that industry.
     
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  9. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    tough call. if it were me, i'd look at primes. people are still getting decent deals
     
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  10. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    Well while a Prius Prime would be nice, the base model is what $29k... and in my experience they've never had a straight base model for any Prius around here only the more expensive packages that end up cost a few thousand more, plus taxes/registration... yeah that definitely would be the most expensive option.

    Looks like NewPriusBatteries isn't an option either, as it says next shipping date is Nov 15 which is a lot longer than I'm willing to wait.
     
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  11. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    check the pricing thread. i think they are still giving a couple thousand off, plus the state and fed incentives
     
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  12. PriusPaddler

    PriusPaddler Member

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    When you watch that Dr Prius page, do the bars stay consistent? I am just learning about Dr Prius myself (free version only) but my readings show those bars always rising and falling and the lowest cell constantly changes. A single screen shot for me might look like yours (never had a high yellow bar yet), but in the next instant a different cell will be the shortest and the different color... So I'm just curious what you are seeing and if that's how you're basing your conclusion that you need a new battery.
     
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  13. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    The way Dr. Prius does its bar graphing grossly exaggerates the voltage difference across the blocks (and I hate it) which makes it hard to compare information when you are comparing across several screenshots. Have you thought of giving Hybrid Assistant and Hybrid Reports a shot?

    What I look for is the Voltage Diff field in the middle there and if it is below 0.30, I don't take much notice of the bar graph.

    However, in your case of 0.32 V is worth looking at. It is obviously having enough of a difference to have P0A80. It is one module (probably) in block 3 that is weak. If you could find another PriusChatter in SF that could help get you set up to use the HA equipment for an investment of purchasing your own harness and come to some arrangement for use of the charger/discharger equipment (maybe for some cash/beers) it might be worth giving that a shot. It might buy you a couple of months. There is a meetup group in the area that you could connect with (@SFO, @Raytheeagle?) who could help with that if you turn up. Not sure myself of how to get you details of that, though.

    As for dropping $29,000+ on a new car, when $2,000-$2,500 would get you a new battery +$400 for a Cat shield, it does not make sense to me. But that's just me, I don't buy new cars and I do my own work and keep my cars going until the wheels fall off.

    The only new tech that interests me is adaptive cruise so I don't feel like I'm missing out on much.
     
    #13 dolj, Sep 2, 2021
    Last edited: Sep 3, 2021
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  14. Raytheeagle

    Raytheeagle Senior Member

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    When I got our 2019 Prime, I gave up my claim to the Hybrid Automotive equipment;).

    But @SFO has it:).

    He's usually down for a good adventure and assist(y).
     
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  15. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    Have not thought about it because didn't know it existed I'll give it a look though.

    Yeah I have been looking for said equipment, and there seems to be a great variation of price, some of the multi unit chargers do seem to be aimed more for small electronic batteries (RC cars, etc), and kind of weighing pros and cons of getting one versus just buying a used battery from someone who makes

    Any more information on this? I assume with COVID times meetups may not happen. Plus I wouldn't want to be "that guy" who will be like "so hey who wants to help me diagnose/repair my car!"


    Yeah that's basically me, except I do buy new cars... well this prius was the first new car I bought in 2006. Got a Cat shield (after my cat was stolen during lockdowns *grr*), just kind of weighing how much money it would take to keep a car going. But the new car route definitely is the last option. I actually was fiddling around on my phone and clicked on one and there was like $10k worth of incentives, unfortunately I couldn't figure out how to find that again, but if I could get a $29k car for 19k that may swing the pendulum the other way. Although if I can get it fixed for "relatively" cheap, the other option is to get rid of the car and be a 1 car family.
     
    #15 MikeSF, Sep 5, 2021
    Last edited: Sep 5, 2021
  16. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    What equipment is there? I thought it was just an OBD II reader with a phone app?

    @SFO ?
     
  17. bisco

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    hybrid automotive prolong charger > /

    but your battery may be beyond help
     
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  18. SFO

    SFO Senior Member

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    How many miles are on the vehicle/hv battery, and has it spent most of its life in SF?
    Only a few approaches, single channel chargers or multi-channel chargers, or a grid charger, which charges the whole pack at once. The learning curve (keeping the pack or modules compressed, properly cooling, not overcharging or discharging, etc), vehicle down time, and added expense of multiple hobby chargers, can make the grid charger option viable for some.

    Many will argue against buying a hodge podge collection of mix matched "used" modules, but if you're flipping the vehicle then whatever.

    There is someone locally selling a newer used battery with under 20k miles from a recent hit and run "total", they are trying to recover some lost monies from the accident and are asking for "best offer", which was at 500 plus whatever has been offered since. Once found, I tried to interest another gen2 member here who has an older HV battery, but they aren't jumping at the moment. Could be a good fit for you, depending on how high it goes or when it actually sells. There is also a 2 month old OEM cat for sale, with dealer papers as well.
    Hard to find the right sub, and it took me like 6 months or a year to locate this particular thread : Possible Monthly install meets. Bay Area-Fremont | PriusChat
    Have you already checked this thread (or a similar thread) : https://priuschat.com/threads/prius-prime-official-prices-paid-thread.174763
    A quick top balance using a grid charger, or multi-cycle reconditioning with a charger/discharger might just do the trick.
    Hybrid Automotive sounds related to Hybrid Assistant/Reporter, the former sells 'grid charger' setups, and the later offers an OBD2 App.

    Here is a thread for building a DIY grid charger (or use the 'advanced search feature' as there may be others) : DIY Grid Reconditioning Charger | PriusChat

    Here are a couple of commercial options that include grid chargers, and some discharger options :

    Prolong Battery Systems | Hybrid Automotive California, USA - possibly more expensive
    Maxx Volts Hybrid Automotive Grid Charger Reconditioning Systems - possibly less expensive

    The equipment that @Raytheeagle was referring to above, is the "Deluxe" Prolong reconditioning package from Hybrid Automotive. This early release version is currently sitting in SF, and sometimes lives in the Concord area. And for those that don't want to purchase there own, there is available an optional harness.
     
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  19. MikeSF

    MikeSF Member

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    I forget the exact mileage, somewhere around 160k I think though. And it's spent all of it's life in SF, minus a few road trips.


    Well I'm not looking to flip the vehicle, but if it ends up getting to that maybe I do.

    Oooh I would do that, assuming "whatever has been offered" isn't an addition $1k or something that pushes it too close to a brand new setup.

    Thanks for the leg work on that! Although that thread looks like not much activity for a while.

    Just took a quick look, that doesn't look promising though. Seems like a high demand car, and the federal tax rebate wouldn't really help me much as someone mentioned that it doesn't carry over.

    Thanks I'll look into some of these options. I would guess my first step would be to diagnose what the actual problem actually is, to see if it is in fact a dead (or nearly dead) cell. I normally consider myself a handy guy, but reading through a lot of this is making me question that, first starting with a massive disassembly of everything in the back just to get to the battery, I was hoping to test/diagnose it in place without having to remove everything, I know naive mindset on that.

    So does that reconditioning package just hook up to the car for a few hours? Lives in the car?
     
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  20. Raytheeagle

    Raytheeagle Senior Member

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    You install the harness and the equipment stays outside of the Prius ;).

    Nice little package and way to maintain a battery or rebuild it:).

    The process takes a couple of days if reconditioning or rebuilding, but it's the easiest way to rebuild or maintain a pack (y).
     
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