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Prius III engine knocking at high torque low RPM (solved)

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by Kortenbach, Jun 10, 2013.

  1. Goneflying

    Goneflying Junior Member

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    Too bad. Thanks for thinking with me though! Hopefully there's somebody else that know how to get this off?
     
  2. DG Bear

    DG Bear Junior Member

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    It's a plastic (or nylon) wire retainer type clip... but it's a pain to get to it.

    You have to pinch the retainer from the rear and it latches from left to right. I used right angle pliers to pinch it while using a flat screw driver to place upward pressure on the clip. (Seems like a door panel trim removal tool would have been easier than the screw driver.)

    Be patient and keep working it... it will come.

    Did you just remove the EGR pipe or did you remove the entire intake manifold and throttle body out of the car?

    There is a real problem inside the intake manifold and you have to remove it to clean it...
     
  3. Umar Ali

    Umar Ali Member

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    so i took apart everything and found carbon deposit of bad kind. now what should i use to clean it up, it is not greasy carbon it is rigid solid deposits.
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    now i need to know what should i use to clean this?. i bought throttle body cleaner from autozone but it mentioned that it may damage the plastic or painted surfaces. now the manifold is all plastic so i am hesitant to use it on that. what should i use instead? any suggestions?.
     
  4. DG Bear

    DG Bear Junior Member

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    Could use the throttle body cleaner just don't get it on your car's painted surfaces. You could also use gasoline.

    Actually yours does not look that bad... the small holes still look open. Was you car having problems?
     
  5. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Spray the cleaner on a cloth and clean with that. Don't spray directly.

     
  6. DG Bear

    DG Bear Junior Member

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    Just for clarity... The post/problem is concerning the intake manifold.... the video is on a different subject - the throttle body.

    These are very different issues. The intake manifold is a more involved project.
     
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  7. mypriuscious

    mypriuscious Member

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    I had this problem, posted about it, a little over a year ago. The dealer replaced the EGR at a total cost of $765.00. Only to have the problem return almost a year to the day. I would've fixed it myself but I feel the prius is a a bit harder to diag with intermittent engine running. Took care of it myself the second time around.
     
  8. Vyse

    Vyse Junior Member

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    Hi there,

    I was wondering what kind ot "clamp" did you use to prevent coolant to flow when removing the intake manifold ? Also, don't you need to drain the coolant as there might be some air inside the cooling system ?
     
  9. Kortenbach

    Kortenbach Junior Member

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    Hi all,

    I am the creator of this thread. I'm happy to see that so many people find this usefull!
    @Vyse: I used woodworking wood-clamps. If you clamp the hose before taking it off you should be fine.
    I did some 20000 miles now without the problem recurring.
    I didn't mention this before but the carbon deposits from the EGR where oily in my car. How about the others? I cannot say my car uses a lot of oil. I never had to refill between oil changes...
    Did anyone find that the EGR was blocked on purpose by adding a gasget (as shown in the first post)? By the dealer?

    Best regards,
    Bert Kortenbach
     
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  10. m.wynn

    m.wynn Senior Member

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    Thanks for checking in, Bert. Like you, I'm at ~20k miles since cleaning up the intake manifold and egr pipe and the car is still running well. Yes, the carbon deposits were "oily" and my 2010 uses zero oil. No doubt it's fuel or fuel vapor creating the sticky consistency of the carbon build-up. It's messy stuff to work with.

    EGR was not blocked. Did you have check engine light/P0401 when your EGR was hack blocked?
     
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  11. Kortenbach

    Kortenbach Junior Member

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    @m.wynn:You can find most details in the first post of thjs thread. No engine light and no ODB codes. The car thought is was doing great while in fact it was pretty ill ;).
    I doubt it is fuel that creates the stickyness. Fuel has a distinct smell and would evaporate pretty quick. I think it is oil, but I have no idea where it is coming from. The stickyness stopped where the stainless ERG pipe connects to the intake manifold. Inside the stainless EGR pipe there was only very limited carbon buildup. It did not need any cleaning.

    Happy tinkering !
    Bert
     
  12. Kortenbach

    Kortenbach Junior Member

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    Oh yeah...
    About the throttle body cleaning...
    @DG Bear: As stated in my first post there was quite a bit of oil in there (check DG Bear's video). I thought that would be normal, but in your video there was no oil!? Maybe in Holland (that's where I live) gasoline contains more oil. That might account for the oily gunk buildup in the EGR return channel. Maybe this is a regional thing? I imagine that the oil runs back to the throttle body after the gasoline is injected into the inlet manifolt. Or am I talking bullshit now?

    Bert
     
  13. m.wynn

    m.wynn Senior Member

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    A poster in this or one of the other IM cleaning threads stated that he left the coolant hoses connected to the TB, simply unbolting the TB and letting it hang by the hoses, thus not losing any coolant. To do over again, I'd just do this. Clamping off the lines is certainly an option, too, if you want to bring the TB to the bench to give it a proper scrubbing. I didn't, and the amount of coolant lost is minimal. I had to add maybe an ounce or 2 and I simply burped the lower hose a few times with the car at operating temp. It seemed to me that the burping didn't even seem to displace any air... A full coolant drain/refill is not in any way needed here.
     
  14. Smiling Bob

    Smiling Bob New Member

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    Thank you for this post. Amazing! The pictures are great too. I am not a mechanic or car savvy ... just do the simple things like changing oil, air filters, etc. I will bring a copy of this post, along with your pictures, to a mechanic. I have a guy at Pep Boys who is Korean and used to work on Toyotas that I always request. He typically does good work. I may take it to him first as I think he would be more open to fixing. Great Post ... this is a great site ... really glad I signed up and posted my problem here.

    Last follow up question ... if this doesn't fix things, what would be the next order of things you would check? IE: Spark plugs? Dirty Throttle Body and Intake Manifold? These were suggestions from other posters. (Already did the spark plugs about 8 months back and the problem started a month or so after this.)

    Thanks!
     
  15. mypriuscious

    mypriuscious Member

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    Yes. My carbon deposits were very oily.

    I go through about a quart of oil every 800 miles.
     
  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Yikes! How many miles on the odometer?
     
  17. mypriuscious

    mypriuscious Member

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    204000. But it's been an issue since I took ownership at 75k
     
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  18. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    I think we have a solution:
    [​IMG]
    It turns out that disabling diesel EGR in cool weather is a common technique in the EU diesels:
    I speculate that a prior owner thought this diesel technique would work with the Prius. We don't know what the original blocking plate looked like but it may have also had a small hole to reduce the flow. The EGR gas and pressure further opened the hole but the low flow rates led to the coked up EGR and tube. Who did it is an open question.

    If it were a common practice at the dealer, there should be more. At one time, I would have been skeptical of a rogue dealer but VW punctured that trust. However, there is another report that in the UK some independent shops have been opening a hole in the particle filter canister, removing the filter, and closing it up again. So putting a block on the EGR may be a common, independent shop technique like gutting the particle filter trap to improve diesel performance and reduce maintenance costs.

    We know in the USA the "rolling coal" owners seek out a software patch that allows them to create huge clouds of soot. It is entirely possible that a similar practice, not for clouds of soot, exists in Europe to improve diesel performance. An EGR blocking plate and gutting the particle filter would be low-tech and easily avoid detection in the past.

    I am beginning to think portable, non-contact, emissions testing is the way to go. Today, they are established by the side of the road. In the future, they need to be on the front of public service vehicles with a license camera.

    Bob Wilson
     
  19. daspi

    daspi Junior Member

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    Well, I have the same strange shake behavior when accelerating in low rpm. Where should I start? First thought spark plugs but after reading here it might be best to start with EGR pipe cleaning and maybe Throttle body cleaning. Should I really bother taking off the whole manifold? BTW I do have the check engine light on now but have not read out the code. Should I go to get it read first? Can I reset it myself? Thanks guys for putting all this up.
     
  20. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    MiniVCI and Windows XP laptop. This will let the two dozen control computers tell you what is broken:
    1. Diagnose problem
    2. Fix problem ... don't confuse 'parts swapping' with a diagnosis.
    Bob Wilson
     
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