2013 Camry hood strut failure while the hood is up

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Car has been in service fro 4+ years, and registered about 90K miles. During the recent routine oil change, the gas charged hood lift support failed and the hood came crashing down. When the hood was opened, it stayed up, no sign of problem. The failure happened well into oil change, when I was under the car, and there was nothing in the engine bay. So I was lucky, extremely. No bodily damage nor property damage. I then assessed the situation, due to the way the struts are placed, when the struts failed, the hood would have a free fall from greater then 45-deg, which would generate a significant amount of force.

I am thinking, this has to happen in the past to a lot of people. I sure am not the 1st one experiencing this. But this is a huge safety hazard. I am looking for a fail safe solution even when I replace the failed struts with new ones. Any thoughts?
 
Definitely replace the hood struts with the best you can find. Otherwise:

Use a pair of vise-grips clamped to one of the struts. However, this may mar the chrome finish of the strut shaft and cause possible early failure of the strut. My BIL did this for years on his Camry and never ever replaced the hood struts. He just kept a pair in the car.

Also, an old broom handle cut to length of your Camry's hood opening. Keep it too in the car/trunk/somewhere.

OR...keep the hood closed but, unlatched during the OCI or any other repairs while under the car and lift the hood as needed.
 
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The Ram in my sig is showing signs that this could happen, especially in winter-the struts are just strong enough to barely hold up the hood. I look a little stupid when I stuff a broom in to hold it up if I need to work under the hood, but I figure it beats a concussion or serious head injury!
 
I just replaced the struts on my Pilot's rear tailgate yesterday. It would have crushed anyone that got caught in the way. Works better than new now.
Fix the struts (do both) and if still worried, use a broom handle.
 
new struts are on the way, and will be in this weekend. Problem I have is that there can be no signs of failure that is what bothers me. If it fails before I lift the hood, I would know what's going on. I'd like to find a way to add a prop rod just for a failsafe measure... any ideas?
 
You could probably create a prop rod that is better than any that you could buy/find. OR, go to a bone yard and try use something from another vehicle.
 
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Same thing happened to me on my Solara. Only one strut. I was getting a jump from someone and we barely cleared it before the hood came crashing down. I use a pair of vise grips now without issue.
 
I consider hood struts a safety hazard. The only close call with a hood I’ve had in on a car with struts. The rest have all been props and ever an issue.
 
I make a point of replacing hood struts, even on [censored] old cars...I had several BMW 528e sedans over the years, and ALL of them needed new struts. They were something like $25 a pair, but it's one of those things that makes me feel like the car is less of a beater if they work right, as well as a safety issue. It's the same thought process as putting new tires on an old car...makes it feel like a well-loved classic, not an old turd.

If all else fails, a broomstick or piece of 2x4 works too, just not as elegant.
 
I got about 15 years of good service out of the OEM rear hatch gas springs on my PT Cruiser. When they failed, it was gradual. In cold weather the hatch needed to be encouraged up and then would drift down a bit, but not slam shut.

I purchased a pair of StrongArm replacement support struts thru Amazon. The price wasn't too bad. They were made in the USA. They seem to work well.
 
Glad you're ok and correct, you are lucky your head not under the hood.

Next door neighbor (older gentleman) has an old Chrysler LHS that had worn out struts. He was using a stick of some sort to hold hood up when it slipped, hit his head hard. At first thought he was ok then later started acting strangely. Rushed to hospital with head injury. Don't think it got as bad as a subdural hematoma, but he wasn't right for quite some time.

Replace the struts asap, and use some type of a prop stick or other method as back up.
 
Oh man, that's bad for your neighbor. I guess professional car technicians would see this more often... wonder how they stay safe... maybe they use a vise clamping on the strut shaft as well. That's a good idea for a failed strut; not so for a good one.
 
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I replaced the hood struts on my '02 Camry about a year ago because they really weren't lifting the hood with the vigor of the ones on my '10 Sonata. The difference in the hood's lifting ease was quite significant; before, I had to "help" the struts get the Camry's hood up; after, I could hit the release latch, lift just a couple of inches, and could then get out of the way while the lifting struts did their thing. Pretty dramatic difference. Put on new hood struts, and don't worry about it until/unless they get tired again.
 
Used to drive a 94 Camry and though the engine and trans were like kryptonite, the hood struts and window motors were pathetic failures. Owned the car for about 7 years and probably never went 2 years without having to replace a hood strut or a window motor. I never trusted those hood struts and always used a 2x4 or something similar as a back up when ever i worked under the hood.
 
I had it fall on me when working on my parents 05 Maxima. Vice grips after that... My 04 Golf the factory one is still fine.

My 94 Pathfinder has the original hatch struts and they still work great. The 95 ones on the other hand, require the vice grip treatment.
 
My 2002 hood struts don't work well in cold weather. I'll get them replaced eventually. I carry a 14" screwdriver in the car that fits perfectly from shock/strut tower to a boxed area on the hood. Put it on the opposite side you're working on...lol....or even better both sides. One time I knocked it out while poking around and the hood whacked me. The hood pad takes up much of the force. But, if you happened to only have your hands or forearms over the grille area, you'd get a heck of cut/bruise/break.
 
I know that it is common for lower end versions of many models to have a simple prop while more expensive lines get the gas struts, maybe you could buy a replacement prop for a cheaper version of your car and retrofit it?
 
Originally Posted By: CincyDavid
I make a point of replacing hood struts, even on [censored] old cars...I had several BMW 528e sedans over the years, and ALL of them needed new struts. They were something like $25 a pair, but it's one of those things that makes me feel like the car is less of a beater if they work right, as well as a safety issue. It's the same thought process as putting new tires on an old car...makes it feel like a well-loved classic, not an old turd.

If all else fails, a broomstick or piece of 2x4 works too, just not as elegant.


Exactly. It's the little stuff that counts and makes something feel well cared for.

I had the hood struts fail on my Liberty and the hood hit me in the head. They were replaced that day, LOL. No big deal. I prefer them to a prop rod.
 
Thank you for the vice grip tip. BMW hoods are heavy, I used a 3 foot piece of 1x4 when a strut failed. stick on top of the radiator or on the in take manifold. The Rat has a rod. KISS
 
Originally Posted By: bullwinkle
The Ram in my sig is showing signs that this could happen, especially in winter-the struts are just strong enough to barely hold up the hood. I look a little stupid when I stuff a broom in to hold it up if I need to work under the hood, but I figure it beats a concussion or serious head injury!


the 05 ram 1500 i was given, the hood struts are useless. previous owner included a piece of wood the correct length thankfully, but i took it to the exhaust shop and forgot to tell the guy and the tech wasn't too pleased to get a hood on his head
 
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