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Apparent "lugging" under slight load

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by EmDub, Aug 9, 2021.

  1. EmDub

    EmDub Junior Member

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    2015 Prius 2 ex-taxi with about 360K miles. I don't know the maintenance history but it drives great and I assume as a taxi it had decent maintenance. The lugging does not appear to be related to the combustion engine. That runs smoothly. It is strictly a drivetrain problem. It does not happen in EV mode and it only happens under a slight load under about 50 mph. If I step on the accelerator to increase the load, no lugging. If I back off of the accelerator to remove the load, no lugging. Over 50 mph I assume the wind resistance creates enough load to prevent it. It seems almost like it is shifting up too soon when the load is reduced, hence the lugging analogy. I don't understand how the CVT Prius transmission works, but the issue seems trans related. I suppose motor or trans mounts could be possible causes, but I've checked them visually and they seem OK. I see another post with a similar issue, but it didn't have a solution. (And I can't reply to that post as a newbie on here)
     
  2. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    Have you done any maintenance on it? First thing I would check is if there's coolant in your oil. Then I would pull the spark plugs and see what they look like. And after that, maybe remove the intake manifold, clean EGR circuit. While you're doing all that, see if there's evidence of a bad head gasket. That's probably the cause of all engine issues with a 300K+ miles Prius Turd generation car.
     
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  3. EmDub

    EmDub Junior Member

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    Issue is not at all related to engine performance. I suppose I could have mentioned that I'm a decent mechanic with about 40 years experience. I've ruled out most obvious things. Thanks anyway though.
     
  4. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    Well there was another mechanic just like you with 40 years experience, bought a 300k miles plug in Prius with the same issue you're describing. Needed a new engine, discovered after removing the intake manifold and seeing lots of coolant.

    You unfortunately in your 40 years haven't seen a turd gen Prius or encountered it's problems.
     
  5. Mdv55

    Mdv55 Active Member

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    You can't say it's strictly a drivetrain train problem and have no idea how the drive train actually works...

    You say it has nothing to do with the EV side, yet the ICE is fine and the problem is the drivetrain? There is only one interface between the ICE and the rest of the drivetrain and EV side of things.

    I'd start by learning how the whole drivetrain works and then start making educated comments on what has been ruled out or not. You can watch the Weber auto videos to learn more.

    Having 40 years of mechanical experience means little. Some people have 40 years of 1 years worth of experience 40X over. It doesn't necessarily mean ne continually grew and learned over those 40 years. The Prius is new to a lot of people. Maybe not dismiss what those who know more about them are saying, especially when you don't know how they work yourself...
     
  6. EmDub

    EmDub Junior Member

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    I did not say it has nothing to do with the EV side. I said it doesn't happen in EV mode. And I fully admit that I know very little about how the Prius transmission works. I did watch a couple of youtube videos about it and it seemed deceptively simple. I am guessing that its a trans issue, but rather than diving in and tearing out the trans based on a hunch, I came here and found threads where others were describing the same issue. I understand combustion engines very well. The engine runs just fine. It idles smoothly and I can cruise at 90 MPH with no problem. Does the EGR have some mysterious magical ability in the Prius? I get it. I also work on a Porsche and the IMS bearing has a similar "boogey man" property in that world. LOL
     
  7. EmDub

    EmDub Junior Member

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    Try not to take this personally but if you have no experience with a Prius exhibiting something that feels sort of like "lugging" does in a manual transmission car that's been inadvertently placed in too high a gear, then your comments on this thread are not desired. Thanks
     
  8. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    replace the ecvt
     
  9. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Has the Exhaust Gas Recirculation System, and intake manifold, ever been cleaned. I'd suspect it has, with those miles, but maybe too little, too late. Who knows. Try a leak-down test?

    More info about EGR cleaning in my signature.

    Just editorial:

    upload_2021-8-12_7-57-29.png
     
  10. EmDub

    EmDub Junior Member

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    That's what I was afraid of. Have you encountered this before?
     
  11. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    Youtube, nice. Why did you come here if you don't want to take the advice of people that actually know this car? You haven't even looked into the engine with 360k miles, haven't pulled the spark plugs, No leak down test, haven't determine if the super common head gasket failure is there. There are 100 cases of head gasket failure for every 1 transaxle failure on this Prius generation.
     
  12. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    no, but at 360k, it doesn't surprise me
     
  13. Mdv55

    Mdv55 Active Member

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    Pretty much one in the same ;)

    IMS bearing is more of a big deal then the EGR issues on a Prius.

    Also, at 50mph, the engine is gonna be 1200-1600 or so and running on an Atkinson cycle. That feels and sounds totally different then when you are hard on the throttle and it's running a more conventional otto cycle. The car is going to try and go to the lowest possible RPM for that road speed if you aren't asking for a lot of power and the rpm constantly fluctuates. That's also a possibility that's what you're noticing if you are new to driving a Prius. I found that very disconcerting when I first started driving one. To me, a change in rpm at a constant speed either meant a slipping clutch or the torque converter just unlocked for some reason. In a Prius it's just another day.
     
    #13 Mdv55, Aug 12, 2021
    Last edited: Aug 12, 2021
  14. Neverbox

    Neverbox New Member

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    " it only happens under a slight load under about 50 mph." You mean like around 46 mph?

    When the ICE (engine) stops, the RPM really does go to zero. With the Classic & Iconic models, that threshold is 42 mph. With the 2010+ it's 46. With the plug-in (while charge is available) it's 62. The carriers in the PSD (power-split device) simply rotate around the stopped component. Above the speed threshold, the engine pumps without consuming any gas.
    See number 2 from:
    About that clutch | PriusChat
     
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  15. EmDub

    EmDub Junior Member

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    I'm still working on this issue but I came across something that helps explain the "lugging" symptoms I'm experiencing.

    https://aecs.net/techniek2012/March%20prius.pdf has the best explanation of what is going on that I've found:
    "The hybrid drive train works with very precise position sensors. The management system needs to anticipate where the rotor of the electric motor is going to be every 65353’st part of a third of a rotation. This so it can power up each of the coils in the stator with the appropriate amount of current; - do not make the magnetic field too strong as you get over shoot of the rotor and also - do not give it too little. The engine is connected to the rotors of the MG’s via the planetary gear set. Any misfire in the engine gives an MG rotor under-shoot, so the MG ECU is going to compensate for this incorrect rotor position by increasing current to the next MG coil. This will be aided by the next cylinder firing, causing overshoot, which needs to be compensated for…."
    It goes on to say,
    "There is in any drive train free play, even in the big ends on the crankshaft. Move all the free play of every item in one direction and immediately in the opposite direction, and presto there is your noise!"

    All this hammering back and forth can also wreak havoc on the Damper Assembly which only makes the sound and vibration symptoms worse. So any misfire could cause the symptoms I'm seeing. (Cue my Ah-ha! moment)

    Another brilliant tip that I stumbled across is that you can troubleshoot by unplugging the EGR valve connector and see if the problem goes away. If it does, then the misfire is very likely caused by something in the EGR tract. I tried this and my problem seemed to go away. My EGR valve, pipe and cooler seem to be new-ish so I'm going to pull the intake and see what I've got going on in there. More to follow.
     
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  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Don’t understand; how many miles?

    Lot of interesting info btw. That damper twixt engine and transaxle does take a beating; there’s been a few failures. There’s a plastic piece on the underside, at the junction; believe it can be removed for inspection.
     
  17. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    You might have stumbled on one of the very few cases where that "brilliant tip" actually tells you something useful.

    A lot of the mentions of it on PriusChat fall into the "you didn't really think that out, did you?" category:

    1. People who think they have a too-little EGR problem because their cooler is plugged, and try to find out by unplugging the valve control, which gives them a too-little EGR problem ...
    2. People who think they have a too-much EGR problem because the valve is sticking open, and try to find out by unplugging the valve control, which doesn't magically close a stuck valve, giving them a too-much EGR problem ...

    Your decision to pull the intake is probably sensible, because there are four small EGR passages in the intake manifold, one to each cylinder. If those four passages are clogged in different amounts, then you could see symptoms like you've reported, where things get rough just under moderate load (which is when the ECM will be calling for EGR). The existence of the problem tells you the valve does open and close and the cooler and piping are allowing EGR to flow, but the engine roughens because the EGR flow comes to the cylinders in different amounts. If you didn't get the roughening when you prevented EGR from happening, the intake is where I would look next.
     
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  18. EmDub

    EmDub Junior Member

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    It’s too early to call my issue resolved but the test drive was promising because my issue did not come back. Here are before and after shots of the EGR holes in the intake. One was so plugged that I couldn’t even jam a screwdriver through it. I let it soak in parts cleaner for about half an hour and then was able to get an awl to pierce through followed by a screwdriver. Also had some camelback cleaning brushes that came in very handy. If I would’ve known it was this bad I would’ve just ordered a new intake but I think my cleaning was thorough enough to last for a while. The toughness of this car continues to amaze me.
     

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    #18 EmDub, Sep 25, 2021
    Last edited: Sep 25, 2021
  19. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Why a lot of head gasket failures commence at cylinder 1:

    upload_2021-9-25_11-24-33.png
    (A little hard to tell, but looks near-totally blocked.)


    Still wondering about that. And the miiles on the odometer, but can kinda judge by the intake condition.

    I'd turn to the EGR now. Judging by your intake condition, for the cooler I'd try protracted soaks in hot, concentrated Oxi-Clean solution. The simplest way to accompish this is to cork one end. This info will help size the cork:

    Intake opening diameter (at exhaust): 20.9 mm
    exit opening diameter (at EGR valve): 25.7 mm

    Don't use Oxi on the EGR valve, or the intake btw. Brake cleaner is sufficient, and mechanical cleaning (brushing, scrubbing) is more doable, and the Oxi can react with various metals. The cooler however, is stainless steel.

    More info in my signature.
     
  20. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Points for new gasket color matching the hood emblem! (y)