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replace head gasket or the entire enginee

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by field_catcher, May 21, 2022.

  1. field_catcher

    field_catcher New Member

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    Appreciate all the inputs.

    An update:
    I picked up the car this morning. Driving back to home (~15miles) was very smooth. I felt no difference as if nothing has changed.
    So far I am quite happy with the whole situation ( well, relatively, after all, I shoved out $35K for the repair, but compare to $70K....)

    The cost of the new used engine is $2200. The shop owner said it is JDM with ~60K miles on it. I trust him but it would be nice to have a way to verify it as the Odometer still shows the old 99K mileage.
    The labor is $1300 for 7 hours.
    The warranty is 1 year / 12K miles

    The shop owner asked me to do oil change every 3.5K instead of 5K, and monitor the coolant level.
    He also changed the water pump, basically my planned 100K maintenance are no longer needed.

    I did some research as to why the head gasket was blown right before 100K which seems to be premature. Beside my luck, I guess I haven't changed oil for almost 2 years might contribute to it (since the covid thing started in March 2020, I haven't driven more than 2000 miles on this car). Lesson learned, I will do oil change every 6 month even I don't drive it.

    Hope it keeps this way. If you don't hear from me, it means everything is good.:)
     
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  2. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    I'm still quite confused on how this head gasket could have failed at under 100k miles. Most of the reported failures are well close to 200k miles.

    Anyways, oil changes at 5000 miles or every year should be sufficient. No need to do 3500 mile oil changes when you're using synthetic oil.

    I would monitor the oil level for the first couple thousand miles. Check after 1000 miles to make sure it isn't burning through the oil. If the engine truly has 60k miles, then the oil burning/usage should be minimal.
     
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  3. field_catcher

    field_catcher New Member

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  4. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Wait a sec, are you thinking your odometer should be set back, to the miles of the donor car? That does kinda make sense, but that's not how it works. Or legal, lol.

    That sounds about right, and maybe the smart money is to clean the EGR every 50K miles. My 2 cents, it's the clogged EGR that's doing in the head gaskets.
     
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  5. field_catcher

    field_catcher New Member

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    well noted. I will put a reminder note in my car.

    Is there a way to tell the mileage of the used engine and if it is JDM or US ones?
     
  6. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Don’t think so.
     
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  7. AzusaPrius

    AzusaPrius Senior Member

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    With the US version you could just run the VIN with carfax that is what I did when Hybrid Pit gave me three engines to choose from and I picked the one with the least amount of miles on it to rebuild.
     
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  8. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    The VIN is on the engine? That’s good.
     
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  9. AzusaPrius

    AzusaPrius Senior Member

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    Yes on the back of the engine on the passenger side.
     
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  10. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    Most salvage yards pull the vin plate. The JDM engines never had one.
     
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  11. field_catcher

    field_catcher New Member

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    An afterthought: If I want to sell the car, what kind of doc/information about the used engine I need to give to the buyer?

    This is what shows on side of the engine. Is this a VIN number?

    Thanks.
     

    Attached Files:

    #31 field_catcher, May 26, 2022
    Last edited: May 26, 2022
  12. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    That is not a vin. I would tell them you installed an engine in May 2022 which was reported to be xy miles. If you can honestly tell them it's not burning oil or leaking, do so. Obviously if it has a vin, run a carfax on it and give the report to them if it backs up the mileage. Most of this is for your benefit; eg to command a better price.

    4557A18C-C408-4E4E-9BFE-A22362432017.png


    Engine Vin Plate

    43B710A2-7EFB-478B-9141-05548E6FE70F.jpeg 84575B5F-35DE-4E79-9F2B-008331A76DB2.jpeg
     
    #32 rjparker, May 26, 2022
    Last edited: May 26, 2022
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  13. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    You’d need a boroscope with mirror view to get a clear pic of that VIN. :coffee:
     
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  14. rjparker

    rjparker Tu Humilde Sirviente

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    First, a JDM engine never had a vin. The year and low mileage claims are completely arbitrary. Most are early models with the flawed rings.

    It escapes comprehension why members continue to be surprised about gen3 head gaskets from 2010-2014. The proof is some shops do several a week. Not all victims check in here first. It is a deeply flawed design and the egr is a red herring. Age and miles combined with poor oil change habits do them in. Toyota implemented the fix in mid 2014.

    You can see the vin panel on non JDM engines from underneath with the panel off. Still, most salvage engines I have seen don't have them. I think they are either JDM engines (almost all ebay listings) or the salvage yard does not want you to know it was an early high mile engine. Many clearly have the rivets drilled out.

    A few yards like LKQ will provide the car vin they came from. Unfortunately. Toyota's sales were large in 2010 decreasing fast as gas prices moderated. So the mid 2014 or 2015 engines are rare and still can be abused. Bottom line, a rebuild that updates the pistons is the smart solution.
     
    #34 rjparker, May 27, 2022
    Last edited: May 27, 2022
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  15. JC91006

    JC91006 Senior Member

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    The best solution is to buy a gen 4 engine and install it into a gen 3 car. Not all mechanics can do this, but the ones that can do it, this would be the best repair option.

    A lot can go wrong on a rebuild so although changing to updated pistons and rings, the rebuild can still be much worse off than installing a lower mileage 2010 - 2014 engine.
     
  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    I’m sceptical. Maybe both the EGR and earlier style rings contrib to head gasket failure, but I think the EGR clogging is the main factor. But who knows.
     
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  17. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    Exhaust cloggs the cooler, causing excessive back pressure, more pressure on the head gasket.
    Any blow by from the weaker oil ring just adds to the exhaust gases, clogging the cooler.
     
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  18. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

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    There seem to be multiple overlapping theories as to the main factor. Are you totally discounting stresses due to thermal gradients? What about the head gaskets that fail on engines that don't use much oil, and have had meticulously cleaned EGR systems?
     
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  19. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    If the EGR cleaning is done with advancing miles, after head gasket failure symptoms have started, a case of too little too late?

    @ASRDogman is around 260k miles on his 2010, on top of all this stuff, and it appears to have payed off.
     
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  20. ASRDogman

    ASRDogman Senior Member

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    271905, today. ;)

     
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