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Improve ride quality? Change rims?

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Accessories and Modifications' started by newguywithpups, Nov 12, 2022.

  1. newguywithpups

    newguywithpups Junior Member

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    Super newb question so pls be nice if this is dumb lol.

    To my understanding and experience, the ride quality for a 2011 Prius is a bit rough. (road noise, bumps, etc) Are there any modifications I can do to improve it?

    I did some cursory research and it seems having bigger tires is one of the biggest factors. I assume I have stock rims, so that would involve swapping out for... Smaller rims to put in bigger tires?? Is that a thing??

    Other than that, there's the suspension, but from what I've read, stock suspension is already optimized for max ride quality.

    I bought the vehicle used but have no reason to suspect there's anything wrong with the car that degrades the ride quality. I figure it's just kinda... a... rickety... car in general...
     
  2. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    Check the COLD tire pressure. Alot of Prius owners run high pressures.
    36psi for the front, 32 for the read. Check the sticker on the door frame.

    How many miles on the car? The strucks and shocks could be worn out.
     
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  3. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    You need tires with taller sidewalls. You did not list your model or existing tire size but most 2010 models had P195/65R15 tires which have a better ride than the 17" tires.

    So the next step is to inflate to the door sticker. Do not over inflate.

    Then consider better quality, better riding tires with lower road noise. Michelin is my choice for those goals plus you get 80,000 or more miles from them.

    Finally, the car has almost no sound proofing. You could add some under the carpets and in the doors. Possibly under the hood.

    Bottom line, Prius is made for mpg and low weight. So they came with hard riding low rolling resistance tires and no sound proofing. Some guys jack up the air pressure to squeeze more mpg at the expense of the ride and noise. Your choice.

    By the way, the Prius v wagon rides better in part because of a special pitch and bounce control.
     
  4. douglasjre

    douglasjre Senior Member

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    New KYB Excel g shocks
     
  5. nicoj36

    nicoj36 Active Member

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    Second this. A lot of people here run their tires with max-pressure. I don’t know how they do it but they must live in areas with nice roads. I live up-north which is pot-hole infested and its impossible to run my tires with high PSI for fuel efficiency without affecting comfort significantly. Even at 35 psi my prius was unbearable and irritating with all the bumps in the road. I found 33 psi to be the max I could go.
     
  6. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    @newguywithpups , as @rjparker mentioned, your model is described as “N/A” in your avatar, which leaves responders guessing regarding your rim size, 15” or 17”. The latter ride harsher for sure. Please clarify.

    Also, what pressures are you running?
     
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  7. Grit

    Grit Senior Member

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    I was thinking air suspension so you can maanually adjust ride height.
     
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  8. douglasjre

    douglasjre Senior Member

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    Tire pressure is kind of a personal preference thing. 28 PSI to 38 PSI relatively speaking you're within range. Every single setting for beaches can be debated but Choose what you like. Each has its own benefit and it's own drawback.

    Princeton some New York City with one of my cars right now. 15 inch rims with a high sidewalk. I'm at 32 psi. Pressure is never going to affect my fuel economy. This is all stop and go. I want to absorb the bumps and I don't think I'm going to ding the rim.

    In Florida I have a Prius I use as a daily driver of the pressure set to 36. The sidewall and those tires is a 60.
     
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  9. newguywithpups

    newguywithpups Junior Member

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    Pirelli p195 65 R15
    Slightly overinflated.sorry, third time typing this. Kept getting errors and losing the message.
     
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  10. Paladain55

    Paladain55 Active Member

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    Stick with the stock size. They are already as close to pillows as you can get. The air in the tire is a spring, and the sidewall height is the spring travel. So basically low pressure and tall sidewalls will give the best ride. I agree michelin touring tires are as good as it gets on noise and softness. You can glue in foam pads to the inside of the tires to make them slightly quieter, and add insulation to the car every where to go quieter.
    I have never had good luck with KYB though. I would go OEM as say if kyb makes the oem shocks and struts for Toyota they have to build them to Toyotas quality standards or Toyota will **** them and send the whole order back and tell them to do better. lol
    I typically just use Bilstein for shock replacements. They are great! Toyota uses them too sometimes so i wonder how they have changed them for their use case...
    My ls400 has 225/60/16 tires stock. I could close my eyes and try to guess if i hit a dog, a kid, a pot hole, a curb. I honestly wouldn't be able to tell you. 225/60 is very similar in sidewall height.
    I put 255/40/19s on now though and it rides like a normal car now though. lol
     
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  11. ColoradoBoo

    ColoradoBoo Senior Member

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    Since it that's old, it may be smart to get a trustworthy mechanic to lift it up and give all the suspension a good inspection. (Say that three times fast!)
    There's quite a few rubber parts that do wear out over time and can cause horrible noise...even motor mounts can make a racket!
     
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