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No speedo, odo, wheels not turning on MFD.

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by k8rhino, Nov 10, 2008.

  1. k8rhino

    k8rhino Junior Member

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    System starts but no speedometer display, no odometer, no fuel guage, etc. Wheels do not turn on MFD. Reverse beeper does not sound. Turn signals function. We purchased a 2006 Base Prius with 109,000 miles and this has become an intermittent problem. The first dealer I discussed the problem with had never encountered anything like it. Generally, after driving awhile and shutting down for a period, system restarts with everything working. On a few occasions the system has refused to power down. Anyone ever had this problem? I searched the threads but haven’t seen any mention of such an issue.
     
  2. Rokeby

    Rokeby Member

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    .

    k8rhino,

    Welcome to PriusChat.

    The randomness of the symptoms plus the age of your car suggests that
    your 12V battery may be on its last legs. While it is somewhat early, the
    12V battery is generally good for ~4 years, who knows what kind of abuse
    may have occurred before you got the car.

    Further support for this idea comes from everything appearing to be fine
    after the car has run for a while. This would come from the 12V battery
    being recharged while the HSD system is operational -- and slowly loosing
    the charge when it's off. You could go to most any competent garage or
    batttery shop and get a voltage check.

    I'm no expert, so let's wait and see what other more experienced folks
    have to say.
     
  3. k8rhino

    k8rhino Junior Member

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    Thanks for the welcome, and reply. I should elaborate. This situation can occur first thing in the morning, after several start/stops on errands, or when restarting after a 30 mile run and an hour or so shut down. Very random. I felt fortunate that the situation, although it had appeared when I purchased the car in FL, never manifested itself during my overnight drive, on a Fri. night, delivering the car to my wife in TN. The dealer in Columbia, TN is going to look at it tomorrow.
     
  4. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    As soon as the car boots up, 12V should be supplied by the inverter. At this point you can remove the 12V battery and everything will still work, so I'd be surprised if your problem was being caused by a bad 12V battery. It's not impossible; the 12V battery could be dragging down the 12V buss, but that is not a common failure mode.

    I think it's more likely that you have an intermittent failure in the speed sender system, which takes out the speedometer. This is consistent with the wheels not turning on the MFD. A loose connector or bad wire may be causing it, or the electronics in that area could be failing. Have any error codes been logged?

    Tom
     
  5. k8rhino

    k8rhino Junior Member

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    The dealer (Ft. Myers, FL) said they couldn't check codes unless the problem was active at the time. Of course, it never did it when it was convenient to bring the car in. What would cause the Prius to refuse to shut off? Interesting "glitches". The car had been a security car for a large, gated golf community, hence the high milage.
     
  6. Patrick Wong

    Patrick Wong DIY Enthusiast

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    Do you have a digital multimeter? If so, I suggest you measure voltage across the 12V auxiliary battery after the car has been sitting for a couple of hours or more. A fully-charged battery should show 12.6V or better. When the car is READY then the voltage should be ~13.8V, as the DC to DC converter maintains this voltage on the 12V bus.

    If the battery is much below 12.6V when the car is IG-OFF, that I suggest you install a new one. Random Prius electrical problems can sometimes be attributed to bad voltage on the 12V bus causing the ECUs to become weird.
     
  7. hobbit

    hobbit Senior Member

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    Anybody think to check the GAUGE fuse? 10 amps, sort of in
    the middle of the driver's side fuse block.
    .
    _H*
     
  8. VicTaxi18

    VicTaxi18 Junior Member

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    I have several Prius taxis. About half the taxis in my town are Priuses. Many have had this problem, usually at around 200,000km but sometimes earlier. Intermittant at the start and eventually more frequently. It's a serious issue in a taxi because when the speedo goes the meter will not register mileage and there's no point going to work. Sometimes changing the battery helps for a while. For a quick fix often disconnecting the positive battery post (10mm) and reconnecting brings the speedo back to life. Other times you just have to wait it out. Occasionally shutting the car off and on repeatedly seems to do the trick. Mostly it seems that it will only go on again by restarting the car, though I left a car running with a dark speedo for 15 minutes once and the speedo was on when I came back. All three of my 200,000km+ Priuses have had the speedo board replaced at least once. You mention hard to shut off - ya I read elsewhere that car doesn't want to shut off when it can't judge that it's stationary. That problem related to the dark speedo but just because it goes away doesn't always mean the speedo comes back on. Add to this symptom that the rear hatch sometimes won't open when dash out and/or hard to shut off - perhaps for the same reason - that the car does not want you to open the hatch when it thinks you might be moving.

    Today I had no speedo again in a car that has about 450,000km on it. I suspect it happened because I shut the car down while putting a window up. I disconnected the battery and reconnected. Presto! I didn't test it to see if problem would occur again if I did the same thing but maybe this is something to avoid....

    Replacing the speedo board has been the only reliable fix that we've found here. It's kind of pricey, but it's one of the few things that go wrong with these cars. It sure would be nice to figure exactly where the problem originates though so it could be repaired more cheaply.
     
  9. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    I've heard of the gauge cluster issue, but am unsure what impact the cluster has on the MFD. If it's actual corrosion on the contacts at the cluster board connector, this could cause problems with the CAN/LIN/BEAN.

    On the industrial side, I've been driven insane by random glitches caused by poor contact due to corrosion. With time and patience, this can be reliably scoped with a MSO/VSA or similar scope

    Eg: this is a CAN glitch caused by noise due to a corroded contact. It took 4 hours of monitoring to build a history, good thing Agilent has scopes with deep memory and smart software

    [​IMG]

    The glitch I highlighted with yellow circles. Will research this when I have time

    Also, make sure all the ground points are good. When my Prius was one year old, I went on a hunch and removed the negative cable and bolt that goes into the unit body. Photo by another PriusChat member

    [​IMG]

    The bolt for the battery ground already had corrosion starting on it. I smeared on some electrical contact grease, and snugged the bolt up again.

    I'm now in the habit of backing off the ground bolt at the unitbody, and snugging it up again, twice a year

    We need to build a statistical failure mode analysis on this problem. Eg: was car operated in high humidity areas? Near salt water? Kept outside all the time or garaged?

    It would be a royal PITA for the owners affected if replacing the cluster was completely unnecessary. That is, if just pulling the connector off and pushing it back on would have been enough to clean the contacts and restore reliable operation
     
  10. tundrwd

    tundrwd Member

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    Yeah, this anecdotal evidence sounds a lot like a resistance build-up somewhere, resulting in possible under-voltage to some components, or inconsistent voltage. The real danger here is that consistent under-voltage (brownout) can lead to stress of the electronics, and failure. This kind of problem sounds very reminiscent of PC mobo issues with power supplies starting to let go.

    I've had several PC mobos die on me, due to bad power supplies. The power supply starts going out, eventually dying, and it usually takes the board with it (probably some spike as it died), but certainly stress to the electronics as it was delivering fluctuating voltage. Since then, I replace my power supplies every 2.5-3 years. And they are ALWAYS replaced when installing a new mobo (at least, back in my Windoze days :D ).

    With the anecdotal information by both jayman and victaxi18, I'd begin to wonder about resistance due to corrosion - somewhere. Battery and battery cables are most logical suspect, but even other areas may be suspect. I've found "in the old days" with the round fuses, that just rolling them within the contacts helped clear corrosion (not the battery kind, just oxidization - you know, the contacts get brown). Or taking them out and using some fine steel wool on them. With the newer type, maybe some take them out, a bit of steel wool or sandpaper, and a contact cleaner (non-corrosive, and non-conductive, of course), and reinsert the fuse 2-3 times. Do it to all of them.

    With so many electronics on the Prius, probably need to think much more along the lines of "it's a computer that just happens to have wheels".
     
  11. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    My background is military electronics - I was a 98K - and industrial/telecomms electronics. The components selected for telecomms use, industrial use, and certainly for military use, have far stricter design specs: eg, must be resistant to voltage excursions with minimal impact on MTBF

    The cluster - Combination Meter - apparently has 4 connectors. So there is a lot of potential for a marginal connection to bugger things up, and perhaps just unplugging each connector, and reseating it, might "cure" the glitch.

    We did a lot of that in the Army and also in industrial work. For example, one client in the mid 1980's with a Honeywell TDC 3000 had a lot of trouble with the Universal Stations and History Modules in the control room. The control room was filthy dusty, which was and still is a no-no

    I would spend half a day powering down the control room Honeywell stuff, and patiently unlatch and reseat every paddle board in the rack. The US's had 10 boards in their racks, the HM's had 5 boards in their racks. Ah, the good 'ole days

    Anyhoo, the four connectors of the Combination Meter

    Connector 1

    [​IMG]

    Connector 2

    [​IMG]

    Connector 3

    [​IMG]

    Connector 4

    [​IMG]

    The combination meter as it relates to the dash assembly

    [​IMG]

    The combination meter networking

    [​IMG]

    So yeah, a bad connection would cause no end to the grief. When the dealership unseats all the connectors - magically wiping the oxidation off in the process - then yanks out the "bad" combination meter, sticks in the $1,000 new one, and reseats all four connectors, everything works again

    Off warranty, I'm wondering if Toyota just s*** cans the "bad" clusters, or sends them off somewhere?
     
  12. richard schumacher

    richard schumacher shortbus driver

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    If only there were an all-gold-plated-connectors option...
     
  13. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Depending on the environment, even gold-plated isn't trouble-free

    I prefer that special contact grease that eliminates oxidation of the metals. Problem is, folks tend to just glop it on like butter on toast. That causes problems too
     
  14. qbee42

    qbee42 My other car is a boat

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    I have seen plenty of gold connectors fail. They are better, but not perfect.

    Tom
     
  15. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Heavy drinking is *always* an option.

    So is screaming the F Bomb at the Combination Meter, while swinging a wrench or sledgehammer ...
     
  16. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    Welcome to Priuschat, K8Rhino :welcome:
    I'm sure you posted your situation because you were looking for answers. You might not have expected that it would get this deep this fast. But it looks like you've introduced a hum-dinger of a stumper to the group.

    Jay, here's a correlation I noted:
    Maybe I'm jumping to conclusions because of two seemingly related points.
     
  17. tundrwd

    tundrwd Member

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    In general, I heartily agree. However, I've often found that what "should be" - ain't. And you still have the possibility of a bad batch of components (caps, resistors, etc.)

    And I always recall my dad saying (he was a fighter jock), "you always have the comfort of knowing that your plane was built by the lowest bidder".

    This is what I suspect the real culprit is. However, repeated jolts, stoppages, etc. to the equipment may result in a shortened life. I'd highly suggest to the OP to disconnect, examine, clean (if necessary) and reconnect the connectors to this equipment.
     
  18. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    I blame the heavy boozing ....
     
  19. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    I agree 100%. Eg the 2004-2006 Prius MFD problems. Actually more of an assembly build issue - weak/bad solder joints - than an outright individual component failure mode

    Yes, such a warm and fuzzy feeling ...

    The vibration can introduce odd failure modes if a contact is weak/poor, either caused by a bad solder joint - eg MFD problems - or just corrosion on the contacts

    According the the ALl Data souce, there are 4 distinct connectors used on the Combination Meter. Any one of them, or a combination of them, can cause issues

    Here is an adventure I had to deal with last fall with the Bryant Evolution furnace in the home I bought around a year ago.

    Around October, woke up and thought hmmm a bit chilly in the house. Went to the Evolution thermostat in the hallway, it had the indoor temp in dim gray, and SYSTEM MALFUNCTION in black bold type overlaid.

    So I called the local Bryant guy, actually he used to own the house and I bought it off him. He rushed over and started going over everything. The diagnostics pointed to loss of network communications

    Note: the furnace, Heat Recovery Ventilator, outdoor A/C unit, and indoor Evolution thermostat all run off the 4 wire Evolution control network. It works like A-B's DeviceNet

    He readily admitted he didn't know anything about that sort of error, so I offered to help him diagnose. The HRV actually has a Bryant Network Interface Module, to control the HRV low/high speed. It was located inside the furnace next to the other control board.

    As soon as we took the access panel off, and had a strong LED flashlight, I noted a couple of the network wires had popped off the terminal strip. I *hate* terminal strips, they require stripping wires, and these were 22 ga wires.

    The wires hadn't just popped out, they had BROKEN OFF. Playing a hunch I wiggled around the other wires on the terminal strip, and a couple more broke off. The guy claimed he had hired an electrician to wire everything up, and at first they had trouble making everything work

    I prefer hot-melt over mechanical stripping of small gauge wires, it's too damn easy to knick the wire. It *will* fail at some point. I have an old hot melt and dug it out of the box

    So with all the wires properly stripped and put back in the terminal block, everything worked fine. In another month or two, that nice long transition up here from heat to cool mode, I'm going to go over every single wire on every single terminal strip, as I no longer trust what this doofus electrician did

    Why didn't they just use a 66 punch down block? It's low voltage stuff, a terminal strip is a bad idea. This is just one example of a failure mode that is practically built in

    It could be with these reported combination meter "failures" a simple - but careful - unseating and reseating of all the connectors may very well solve the problem

    Unless you have access to a VSA or similar scope with deep memory, that will automatically freeze frame network glitches, you'd never know if random noise or weak signal is the culprit.
     
  20. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Howz that tail light working, Mr BACNet?

    Blinky blinky flicker flicker ....

    Baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa