My :jawdrop: idea for stretching out the Prius gas mileage to 75 to 100 mpg without spending $8k to $24K for an aftermarket kit or job is to:
1) buy a replacement Prius NiMH battery pack from Ebay where they have them for $800 to $1100. Install it in parallel with the stock battery. Be careful and wear gloves as I've heard the car battery has 288 volts.
2) Install the EV-only switch to the switch blank on the left side of the dash described and pictured here in a PDF.
Since the Prius BMS is designed to override the EV-only instruction whenever the battery falls below 80% charge, the gas engine (ICE) may try to run to recharge it. Try to handle that by installing:
3) manual ignition defeat switch on the ICE starter. I suppose that ignition failure could cause computers to shut off the EV motor, but probably not.
Alternatively, buy the aftermarket BMS replacement box from Hybrids-Plus in Boulder, CO
Then if I know I only want to go 25 miles or less at 34 mph (the governor limit Toyota puts on the EV motor) I won't over-deplete the batteries.
Now I just need a battery charger for a 288 volt battery to plug into when I get home. Where can I get one of those?
Any ideas or experience here, guys?
Bob in San Diego
Would this actually work???
...and what's up with the governor set at 34mph? That is going to turn so many people away!
Vinnie
Broomfield, CO
Crap, I'd figure out how to remove that governer, first. Why is it on there in the first place? Is it not big enough to make it go any faster? That's what gears are for.
In regards to the mod, sounds neat. IMO, all hybrids need to be plug in. That way you don't have to buy gas to just drive around town. Cheaper.
The author of this post isn't responsible for any injury, disability or dismemberment, death, financial loss, illness, addiction, hereditary disease, or any other undesirable consequence or general misfortune resulting from use of the "information" contai
How da Prius works - from How Stuff Works website. Can't edit it, but so much prettier than Wikipedia ;-)
How Hybrid Cars Work - The Prius
this has a bunch of cool animations
I want to do something like this, so if you are around Kollyfornia and think you can help me get 75 mpg on a 2004 Prius get back. Thanks!
Hello,
just do some pimping and use the burn and coast technique and come back with the MPG results please!
The modifications:
- get rid of the interiors you don't need
- use low resistance tires
- use camera instead of mirrors
- mount some underfloor coverings
- lower the vehicle
- rebuild removable metal sheets by some made of aluminum
cheers
Once you are past the 5 year warrantee, I think this is a great upgrade. I was certain there was a better way to hack this than the Hymotion $17,000 kit.
Toyota isn't calling me for advice, but...
The controller should come from the factory with a large socket to easily add a second battery pack, plus a special socket to add one or two large capacitors.
Its my understanding that chemical batteries can't absorb most of the re-gen watts that are available. I've read talk that a large capacitor can easily absorb braking and downhill regen, but only so much. The cap can then be used for the start-up watts, with the battery being phased in when your speed stabilizes.
By having sockets (like computer RAM chip memory) the consumer can buy an affordably priced base model Prius, and then easily add those devices that suit their use profile and budget.
Thanks, here is the only answer I received on Yahoo Answers, probably because not too many gear heads there know one end of the resistor from the other, LOL:
Hmmm - Wondering is not much of a "can do" kind of guy is he?
1) Install a battery management system to address the pack equalization problem. Talk to the folks who make the BattEQ and see if you can tempt them to make you a suitable system.
2) What is the Ah capacity of the standard NiMH battery pack? What is the kW rating of the motor? Those things should be easy to find out and that should help calculate a theoretical range. Check out my CB-750 blog entries and you can find a link to a spreadsheet that does a fairly complete job of calculating power requirements to push a vehicle at a certain speed. You could edit it to have Prius figures. If you're interested in doing that but can't find the spreadsheet or can't grok how to do it then let me know and I'd be happy to help.
Good luck!
Spinningmagnets - but Toyota should be asking you! ;-)
John H. Founder of Current Motor Company - opinions on this site belong to me; not to my employer
Remember: " 'lectric for local. diesel for distance" - JTH, Amp Bros || "No Gas.
Greetings everyone!
The only way to turn off the ICE is with an ecu hack. Once the engine is off you will also need to write messages to the prius communication network. The cheapest kit to do this is 8500 dollars available from www.autobeyours.com and is also available from plugin supply. The kit includes 7.5 kw/h of lithium batteries. this is current news as of Feb 2009.
Additionally it allows not 32, but 52 mph in all electric mode.
look for my videos on youtube, search for imwoody36 or all electric prius.
The Prius Parts Guy
Woody, welcome to V. I had done some research on fuel efficiency in plugin hybrid vehicles and noticed your site having a picture claiming 100 miles/gallon. I recall during the research finding some statements that high miles/gallon in a vehicle that does not go highway speed isn't a real miles/gallon measure. Typically people want to drive highway speed in a vehicle capable of highway speed. I appreciate that you have a conversion kit available, just curious what you think of the tradeoffs of speed and electric only mode that you have made.
- David Herron, The Long Tail Pipe, davidherron.com, 7gen.com, What is Reiki