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Britprius

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Posts posted by Britprius

  1. 11 hours ago, KentIS300 said:

     

    I will have a look at this tomorrow. I realised today that the visible adjustor nut is the one that adjusts horizontal ... hence no movement when I was doing it.
    The hidden screw nut is the one that should adjust the height. I think before I do anything else .. better to look into the control arms of the sensors.

     

    Is there one on the front and one on the rear?

    I take it they will be on one of the front arms and one on the rear arms?

    One on the front nearside, and one on the rear nearside. You only need to adjust one. The front is by far the easier as the wheels will still be on the ground enabling a true height setting without trial, and error. As the rear rod can only be got at with the wheel removed.

    John. 

    • Like 1
  2. Check that the control links on the front and rear suspension are not broken. The ball joints seize then bend and brake the rods made of a zink material. The system still thinks it is OK in this situation, and does the headlamp dance. These rods cannot be bought separately and are considered part of the complete adjuster assembly at a bit shy of £300, but can be repaired with a little thought.

    If the rods are OK a cheating way to adjust the height of the lights is to alter the position of one of these rods in the slot adjustment on them where they fasten to the electrical variable resistor. The front one on the near side is the easiest to get at as it can be reached with the steering on a full left hand lock. The ball joint fastens to the resistor with a 10 mm nut facing outwards. Slacken the nut turn the resistor till the headlamps are at the required setting, and tighten the nut.

    John.

    • Like 1
  3. 12 hours ago, AmbroseJohn said:

    Mine sounds like a bunch of nuts and bolts in a tin can but Lexus have serviced it and say everything is OK.

    Mine is exactly the same for around a second or so. I think it is the VVT units being empty of oil after standing some time, but could even be the hydraulic tappets?

    I think the garage that I bought it from have used 20w50 oil or some such in the service before I collected the car. It does not look like the usually clear thin 0 or 5w30 oil. I have just bought 10 ltrs of 5w30 fully synthetic oil from Asda for £28 so I will do an oil, and filter change to see if there is any improvement. This oil will possibly be used as an engine flush.                                                                                                                                    I will also check the VVT oil filters when I can get time. There must be some way of curing this problem as in the long run it must be damaging to the components that are making the noise.

    At one time there was an add on oil pre-lube system available. This stored oil under spring pressure in a container the oil being released at ignition on, but before the engine was started, and then being recharged when the oil pressure reached a given level. Thus the engine always had lubrication before running.

    The engine otherwise runs smoothly even when cold.

    John.

  4. 1 hour ago, Darklex said:

    Hi All,

    I have had my CT for about 3 months and drove it and done around 3K miles. I do like my car a lot and I am always thinking every time I press the brake is it the electric motor slowing the car down or is it actually the brake pads being used?. I heard on the internet that that the pad wear is not like other cars and will last longer between changes. But I do feel/sound when i do use the brakes it does seem like i use the brake pads all the time. Any thoughts?

    Thanks..

      

    The CT uses the same system as the Prius. The braking above 7 mph under normal circumstances is all regen. In an emergency situation or if an of the wheels slip on the road surface the brakes immediately return to the friction brakes.

    The small downside to this is that the rear brakes often go rusty due to lack of use. To overcome this once or twice a month going down a hill select neutral and gently brake. Doing this forces the use of the friction brakes and keeps the rust at bay.

    On the Prius it is not unusual for the brake pads to last 200,000 miles with good driving practice.

    John.

    • Like 2
  5. On 9/23/2016 at 3:48 PM, OldTrout said:

    I am preparing a plan B in case my warranty claim fails. I have a quote for all four dampers from both Amayama and www.lexuspartsnow.com/ as mentioned by glawrie in an earlier posting.

    I think the part numbers are rears 4853080357, and fronts 4851080429 and 48520801765. The Amayama price including shipping but excluding inport duties, VAT etc is an eye-watering £2237. lexuspartsnow quote £710 without the shipping and importing costs. i.e. probablely about 40% of Amayama's price.

    glawrie did you eventually buy your shocks from lexuspartsnow? Did it all work smoothly and what were in importing costs?

    The shocks are easy to change. The rears the most difficult because you have to remove all the boot trim before you start, and reach in some distance to get at the top mounting point.

    Although everything I have read about removal says a spring compressor is required. On the spares that I have with springs I can easily remove and fit the rear springs without such equipment. I have not as yet tried this out on the fronts as I have no parts to try. I will however keep you posted as to my findings.

    A trolley jack or two, and a few sockets are all that is required in the way of equipment.

    John

    As per my previous post on the GS450H a spring compressor is not required to change the front or rear shocks. This makes it a simple DIY job.

    1  (Front and rear) Undo the centre top shock mounting nut with the car still on it's wheels. Do not undo the three top mounting nuts. At the front the cover over the mounting must be removed "three nuts".

    2 (Rear) jack up the car and remove stabilizer link bolt, headlamp link, shock absorber bottom bolt, and lower arm to hub bolt.                        (Front) As above, but undo top suspension ball joint instead of lower arm bolt, and unplug the ABS cable from the hub.

    3 Prize down bottom arm with suitable lever "does not require much effort". Withdraw shock with loose spring.

    To refit:- Fit spring over shock, fit spring with shock in place and fit shock lower mounting bolt. jack under the suspension aligning the spring on it's seats fitting top mounting nut as the thread appears through the top mount.

    This save the hassle, and dangers of using spring clamps. I do not know if this applies to other GS models, but I do not see why not.

    John

    • Like 2
  6. When I first had the GS450H I thought how silent the car was, and this was coming from a Prius not exactly a noisy car. Now driving it for a few months I do hear the engine where as before I only heard it when accelerating hard. People that ride in the car for the first time invariably comment on how quiet it is and say when will the engine start.

    I think the noises you hear are normal, but you are attuned to them so hear them more noticeably.

    John 

  7. The shocks are easy to change. The rears the most difficult because you have to remove all the boot trim before you start, and reach in some distance to get at the top mounting point.

    Although everything I have read about removal says a spring compressor is required. On the spares that I have with springs I can easily remove and fit the rear springs without such equipment. I have not as yet tried this out on the fronts as I have no parts to try. I will however keep you posted as to my findings.

    A trolley jack or two, and a few sockets are all that is required in the way of equipment.

    John

  8. I to find the dipped headlamps on the GS very poor. I have not yet looked into the possibility of dismantling the headlamps to see if cleaning the lens, and reflector would make any improvement. The lens does look milky from the front of the lamp unit.

     I have had many cars in the past with D2S headlamps with much brighter output. My Prius with ordinary halogens performed better than the GS on dipped beam.

    John 

    • Like 1
  9. I should have more detail on repair at the end of this week. The shaft seal is the weak link. Provided that the hard chrome on the shafts is not damaged and the shafts are straight, and there are no dents in the tube refurbishment is looking very doable. These shocks are of the monotube design so the internal bore of the tube is part of the working of the hydraulics.

    If anyone is having there shocks replaced insist on keeping the old units. If there is enough interest, and a few spare old units to go at it is possible I may be able arrange an exchange repair scheme. Apologies if I am breaking any forum rules in saying that.

    The alternative is for me to show the intended method, and let people do it themselves. It does however require access to high pressure Nitrogen gas refill equipment putting it a little beyond the home DIY'er 

    John.

  10. I have just carefully dismantled a rear shock off my GS450H "2 new one's fitted before I bought the car", and they left the old shocks in the boot.

    The OEM KYB shock absorbers are classic mono tube design with a spacer piston in the bottom to separate the gas from the oil. This means it is possible to loose the oil without loosing the gas. The result of this is when the shock is removed from the spring the piston rod fully extends with virtually no control. Only the top rod seal was worn on the dismantled shock.

    I have found a source for the seals "awaiting price", but even if they are £20 each "witch I doubt" refurbishing should be possible for little money.

    John 

  11. I am considering changing the dip HID D4S bulbs, and the ballasts to D2S. Although an older system they give out more light. These run at around 80 volts the current being roughly halved at the bulb, against 40 volts for the D4S.

    I consider along with others the dip beam on the GS450H poor against other vehicles I have had. Going from main beam to dip with oncoming traffic out in the countryside causes almost total loss of vision.

    John

  12. 9 hours ago, carnut1980 said:

    I am looking to buy a used but low mileage HV battery unit, to take apart, and swap most/all my current cells with .My gs450h has done over 300k and although it drives fine, i do keep getting the p0a7f code showing. I can clear it, but it usually comes back every 2-3 days. I do understand that, like with any rechargeable batteries, they lose their ability to hold charge over time/miles. The engine will always cut in and charge, but i feel i could be getting a little more power/economy, and indeed, more battery/less engine usage with general driving. My question is this:

    The prius/Auris/CT200h 1.8 all use the same cells, in a smaller battery unit (28 units instead of 40 on mine) Does the IS300 also use the same, and how many cells in that one? part number 

    G9280-76010

    I have already had my HV battery apart twice, so i know what i'm doing. I also have the techstream software. All cells show over 8v, but overall battery is 51%, so could be far better, and no doubt this explains why i keep getting that fault code.

    One or two sellers do the gs450h unit, so would save me taking mine apart fully, just swapping over, but it obviously costs more, and the mileages are higher. Some of the 1.8 units only have 30k on them

    Also, some units are in latvia or lithuania. Has anyone ever had an issue with customs, and had to pay a hefty fee?

    Thanks in advance guys/girls

    The level of charge shown in Techstream will only ever be in the region of 40-80% depending on the number, and color of the charge bars shown on the MFD display screen. The important numbers to look at are the module pair voltages, and the internal resistances. The voltages should not differ more than about 0.005 volts. The resistances of the module pairs should also be the same as close as possible reading around 0.023 ohms. 

  13. 22 hours ago, Diesel Do Nicely Brian said:

    Going to replace all my other bulbs this weekend, once the new headlight is in on Friday (and eventually the HID bulb when it goes on the drivers side, which Lexus are not touching).  This includes:

    Fog lights to HB4 LED

    Side lights (front) to LED

    Main beam to HB3 Osram Ultimate upgrades

    Reversing bulbs to LED

    Rear indicators to chromed yellow bulbs

    Puddle lamps on mirrors to LED

     

    Already done the front yellow indicator bulbs.

     

    Should brighten & modernise it all up :)

    The puddle lamps on my GS450H same year are LED's. The only lights that are not LED are head lamps, front side lamps, fogs, and interior vanity mirrors.

    John

  14. Check the coils on top of the spark plugs are clean and dry. Add some injector cleaner to the fuel, and change the plugs this hopefully will stop the misfires. If the car has been standing for some time the fuel in the tank may not be that good. The timing chain theory is very doubtful.

    With the VCI at the beginning of the process you have to choose a type number from memory 0707/0707-0708/0708. Try a different number as I had a similar problem and choosing a different number enabled access to all the ECUs.

    I do not wish to jump the gun on the humming noise, but this can be a shorted winding on MG1 if it does it while standing still or a wheel bearing when on the move. Shorted winding's will be picked up by the VCI.

    John

    • Like 1
  15. Having had a Prius for 8 years, and now the GS450H I can confirm the rear camera system is almost identical. It would not make sense for Toyota to have different systems across it's range of vehicles.

    As a retired electronics engineer I am looking into the possibility of fitting a hard drive in place of the satnav DVD player running the later mapping, or even running an Android satnav through the OEM touch screen. The Android system makes the most sense because of the free map updates with speed warnings, speed camera positions, and most of all the ability to enter full post codes.  

    John

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