Toyota's new electric oil pump.

I didn't read everything, but even my 3500HD has a variable displacement oil pump. It adjust based off a few things, but is routine to see oil pressure sitting at 20 to 25 at idle with 5W-30. It will get as high as 50 to 60 and will sit at 35 to 38ish cruising down the road with a trailer.
 
I didn't read everything, but even my 3500HD has a variable displacement oil pump. It adjust based off a few things, but is routine to see oil pressure sitting at 20 to 25 at idle with 5W-30. It will get as high as 50 to 60 and will sit at 35 to 38ish cruising down the road with a trailer.
Variable displacement pumps have been quite common for the last while, but they are electrically actuated/controlled, not operated. They are still a mechanical pump.
 
So on a regular mechanical non sophisticated oil pump, as RPM increases, more oil pressure PSI should be produced by the mechanical oil pump.
That is how most cars work. But the Toyota electric oil pump is changing that gradual increase in oil pressure to a fixed 10psi for example. Therin lies the potential for increased wear if your RPM = 2999 you would get 10psi (as the Toyota oil pump increases from 10psi to 40psi at 3,000 RPM).
 
for example. Therin lies the potential for increased wear if your RPM = 2999 you would get 10psi (as the Toyota oil pump increases from 10psi to 40psi at 3,000 RPM).
"It's for an example " to make the layman understand. It's an electrical motor that takes care of business on the fly. Stop trying to find fault.. a barista gets a drink wrong @ 15 bucks an hour.
 
Variable displacement pumps have been quite common for the last while, but they are electrically actuated/controlled, not operated. They are still a mechanical pump.
No I get it, I was more addressing people being worried about low oil pressure. I had some LT1 cars that run at 5 to 10 warm/hot idle after 100,000 miles for 100,000 more miles.
 
No I get it, I was more addressing people being worried about low oil pressure. I had some LT1 cars that run at 5 to 10 warm/hot idle after 100,000 miles for 100,000 more miles.
Toyota knows that 99.99999 % of the people that buy a vehicle with an electric oil pump wont know and if they did they would not care.
 
BMW started using electric water pumps in the mid-2000s until recently it seems. Toyota used them on the 2010-current Prius(and the C/V/Plug-In/Prime variants as well as the Lexus CT200h/HS250h) but the hybrid Camry/RAV4/Highlander/Sienna and their Lexus sisters still used a mechanical pump.

https://www.bimmerworld.com/About-Us/BMW-Cooling-System-Tech/
And it is interesting that BMW has gone back to engine driven pumps on their latest generation 4 and 6 cylinder models (B48/B58)
 
And it is interesting that BMW has gone back to engine driven pumps on their latest generation 4 and 6 cylinder models (B48/B58)
BMW did that because their electric cooling pumps would croak at about 60k miles. Why? The electric motor was getting the full heat from the coolant as it wasn't insulated in any way.
 
BMW did that because their electric cooling pumps would croak at about 60k miles. Why? The electric motor was getting the full heat from the coolant as it wasn't insulated in any way.
Yea, the BMW pumps looked like a turbo or a Vortex blower with the motor mounted inboard. Made by Conti.

The Aisin electric one Toyota uses on the 2ZR-FXE and the second version of the 1NZ-FXE for the 3rd/4th gen Prius and Prius C have the electric motor sticking out from the accessory drive end of the engine. Failures of them are heard of but rare.
 

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There's no doubt that fully modulated electric oil and water pumps, and electric fans all are in the direction of maximum efficiency. We are adding complexity for more efficiency.
Increased efficiency is a bad thing, if it means increased engine wear and shorter engine life.
 
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