Kinda an odd problem about my 12V battery-cables

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Main Forum' started by priuslyfe, Feb 1, 2026 at 12:48 PM.

  1. priuslyfe

    priuslyfe Member

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    thanks for the advice. HAD to walk through snow and ice today and thought maybe a better design is 1) battery was moved towards the front of the car ie. the normal place or 2) have a hot air vent from the engine towards the battery to at least mitigate the risk of freezing.

    also discovered that while walking through snow and ice, you often take twisted ankle steps, sometimes several in a row. a technique that seemed to work for me today is trying to use one foot as my flat foot and the other as my twist-foot, thus giving me some stability. I seemed to move marginally faster.

    the reason I don't use both as my flat-foot is that isnt a reasonable request. the reason for this is most people havent shoveled their sidewalks. i dont fault them as snowplows have covered them with 2ft of snow that has since become blocks of ice.
     
  2. Hayslayer

    Hayslayer Active Member

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    The other end of that heavy cable is connected as the supply source for the underhood fuse box in the upper driverside of the engine compartment. There is no real slack to be had.
    You'll either need to get the crimp fitting removed, opened up and recrimped/soldered, OR do what some others have done and find a salvage yard that has a gen 2, cut that cable several inches back and crimp/splice the new piece of 'yard' cable onto yours. You don't want to make a loop in the wire, so you'll need to trim it as needed to get the correct original length. Otherwise it's just a pain to stuff it in place.
     
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  3. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    but, for that size wire and ampacity, is less common, and requires the heavy crimp tools they have at your neighborhood independent auto electric shoppe.

    I would probably try to get the last foot or so of that wire out of a salvage car, then take it to my neighborhood auto electric shoppe and have them make it up. They'd charge me less than the cost of a heavy-nice-person tool I might never use again.