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2007 Toyota Prius Won’t Start: No Power, Stuck in Neutral

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by StanthePriusdriver, Aug 15, 2024 at 3:22 PM.

  1. StanthePriusdriver

    StanthePriusdriver New Member

    Joined:
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    Location:
    Wheaton, MO
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    Touring
    Vehicle: 2007 Toyota Prius
    Body: Hatching
    Mileage: 258,000 miles (bought at 253,000 miles)

    Problem Description:
    While driving, my Prius felt like it was facing a huge resistance force. When I pressed the accelerator, there was no power pushing the car forward or into reverse. I got the car pushed out onto a parking lot, and now it doesn’t move at all. I can’t shift the gear into drive or reverse; it only stays in neutral. Park still works, but I’m not sure what happened to the car or why it’s doing this.

    Additional Information:

    • I haven’t done an oil change since I bought the car but have added oil as needed.
    • My dad thinks the lack of an oil change within 3,000 miles might have caused the motor to die.
    • I watched a YouTube video titled " How to fix a Toyota Prius that won’t start or go into drive or park." by C&S Automotive, that seemed similar to my issue, but it didn’t show if the car was drivable after charging the 12V battery.
    • I’m considering charging the 12V battery to see if it will get the car going again.
    • Is it safe to charge the 12V battery using my dad’s eleventh-generation Toyota Corolla? I’m worried about potential differences between the batteries in a hybrid and a gasoline car.
    • Can't I just wait a couple of minutes for 12V battery to charge instead of requiring a scan tool?
    • I don’t have a scan tool reader and don’t know which one to purchase or where to get it from.
    • Does a scan tool help read the life of the 12V battery, or do I need something else for that?
    Any advice or suggestions would be greatly appreciated!
     
  2. Tombukt2

    Tombukt2 Senior Member

    Joined:
    Nov 29, 2020
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    Location:
    Durham NC
    Vehicle:
    2009 Prius
    Model:
    Base
    Well your basic objective here is going to be to make sure the 12 volt battery actually has 12 volts when things are turned on and the car is trying to ready to drive the word r e a d y on the dashboard and blue green letters so right now you can't get that and your shifter won't do anything or talking about You must have some other orange or red lights on the dash when you're trying to do this driving You should make a note of those they're going to be there and you will need to probably get the codes read. There's almost no way around reading the codes You going to give you the information you need to figure this out Is the little car in the upper left of the multifunction display green or red when you're trying to ready the car?
     
  3. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    Location:
    Indiana, USA
    Vehicle:
    2010 Prius
    Model:
    IV
    Are there any warning lights on the dash? If so, it will be helpful to read the trouble codes to find out why.
     
  4. pasadena_commut

    pasadena_commut Senior Member

    Joined:
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    Location:
    Southern California
    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    N/A
    I believe it was Hobbit who demonstrated that once a Prius was started one could detach the 12V entirely and the car would continue to run. So the 12V should only cause it to stop running if it is not just undercharged, but acting as a serious load. Like a shorted cell or some problem like that. I would suggest that rather than just blindly trying to jump start the car it would make sense to at least measure the voltage on the 12V, and better yet, attach it to one of the small electronic testers. If you find super high internal resistance or 9V or something catastrophic like that, don't jump it, replace it. Conversely, if it tests good, then that isn't the problem.

    If you need to replace the 12V Walmart sells one for less than one from the Toyota dealer.

    A car with symptoms like that usually throws codes. Get them read with a decent scanner and report back. Note, a really bad 12V can cause some odd codes due to the low voltages. Those go away when the battery is replaced.

    It sounds like you may not have any of the right test tools. In that case, I would start with by getting a digital multimeter to at least read the 12V voltage. These are less than $10 at Harbor Freight and maybe a little bit more at a hardware or auto supply store.

    When you turn the car on, does the ICE start after a few seconds?

    Check the oil level and both coolant levels. Always possible to have a catastrophic leak of one or the other from a rock or a piece of road debris.
     
  5. dolj

    dolj Senior Member

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    Location:
    Wellington, New Zealand
    Vehicle:
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    Model:
    N/A
    According to your original post, you've put 5,000 mi on the car but don't say when the previous owner did the last oil change. In any case, at best, you are due an oil change, and at worst you are seriously overdue for an oil change. If your car burns oil, you still need to change the oil every 5,000 mi regardless of how much oil you use in between otherwise you are just building up sludge and crap in your oil sump.

    Unless you are tens of thousands of miles overdue I doubt now being due an oil change is going to "cause the motor to die."
    Nope. It will take several hours if your battery is seriously discharged. Regarding the scan tool, see below.
    See this thread that reviews several modestly priced scan tool options.
    The scan tool (a good one, that is) can give you 12 V battery readings but will not test the battery, as such. For that, you can perform some rudimentary tests (search PriusChat) to gauge if the battery is good or not, or use a dedicated battery tester like this one.