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2012 Toyota Prius Plug-In: 15 mile EV range, 87 MPGe, $32,000

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by Danny, Sep 16, 2011.

  1. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    15 miles EV range is from the US announcement. There is no indication whether if it is from EPA test or not but there is no asterisk next to it.
     
  2. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    Yes, Toyota's 15 mile electric range claim for the U.S. Plug-in Prius is vague.

    I'm pretty sure I remember seeing a Toyota brochure or web page released for the the 2011 Frankfurt announcement that referred to the Prius Plug-in getting "approximately 14.5 miles" and I think the U.S. marketing announcement likely just rounded that up to 15.

    It would make no sense for the U.S. version of the Plug-in Prius to get significantly better electric range than the European version. The 14.3 European cycle range number is almost certainly significantly higher than an equivalent EPA electric range would be.

    The Volt and Leaf electric range estimates based on the European cycle are reported as being 48% higher than their EPA electric range estimates -- 52 vs. 35 for Volt/Ampera and 109 vs. 73 for the Leaf. If the Plug-in Prius 14.3 mile electric range were similarly scaled it would end up as 10.
     
  3. spwolf

    spwolf Senior Member

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    why didnt they just put miles/kWh on the EPA sticker? My european self can not make sense of MPGe.
     
  4. spwolf

    spwolf Senior Member

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    most likely they decided not to use such far fetching estimates, as people will end up complaining for not reaching them. Just like they do on leaf and volt.
     
  5. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    Huh?

    Toyota is using the same European cycle test estimates that generate those high electric range estimates for the Volt and Leaf..... That is the source of their 14.3/14.5 electric range estimate for the Plug-in Prius in their recent Frankfurt announcement and the follow-on U.S. announcement of 15 is almost certainly based on that as well.
     
  6. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    I'm one of those that assume that 87mpge is for those charge depleting miles. If so then in the 15 charge depleting miles if you use 3.6kwh then you will also use 0.07 gallons of gasoline. In any of the cars you can stay at low speed and get better kwh/mi, but I doubt toyota is claiming 15 all electric miles with no gasoline doing epa type testing.


    They do have this kwh/100 miles on the EPA sticker as well as MPGe.
     
  7. spwolf

    spwolf Senior Member

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    really? Well what portion of the test do they emulate under EV, when test itself is a lot longer than 15 miles?

    I am sure there is quite an difference they could make with that, otherwise you would have same difference between Prius EPA and Prius European figures, just like you do with Volt and Ampera.
     
  8. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    I am going to start a thread for all interested to post their PIP EPA sticker guesses; then, I expect everybody to spot posting as if they had a clue and instead preface any statement discussing PIP fuels economy with "according to my guess,..."
     
  9. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    I don't know. Toyota states that the number is calculated based on the European test cycle but they don't give any details about how they applied the test cycle to the Prius blended hybrid design. I haven't yet found any detailed specifications for how the electric range calculation for the European test cycle is being performed even for full-power electric designs like the Volt and Leaf. I just know the results have been disclosed. I've done some simple searching for the test cycle regulations but haven't yet really focused on finding the specifics that I'm looking for.
     
  10. spwolf

    spwolf Senior Member

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    i am pretty they can influence their results or they wouldnt be so different.

    it is almost impossible for anyone to make "perfect" grading scale when you have plugins that could be 10 miles, 15, 25, 35, 41, etc, etc.
     
  11. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    Toyota's cautiousness does seem to be a bit over the top and wondering how much development was vested before the Leaf's release. its no secret that range anxiety only takes a backseat to cost.

    the price point Toyota has entered their first PIV is a no brainer. sure many think that $24,000 would have been better but with the exchange rate. that would have been impossible and remember, this is not a new car, its a modified Prius which means there is a higher minimal standard level the Prius must maintain which adds to the price. so to get ANY AER AND maintain the 50 mpg is really a monumental task considering the price.

    with the introductory PIV model with its seemingly paltry 15 mile AER, i see the beginnings of the same development cycle of the Prius. this model is really not the end product. its the "toe in the water" but not in a sense of testing the water. its the process in which Toyota slowly gains acceptance of the technology; the acclimation of the water to the fears associated with word "battery"

    remember; acceptance of Version 1 means excitement when a 50% increase in performance for model 2 is announced.
     
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  12. Rybold

    Rybold globally warmed member

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    There's two ways I look at it, and I keep going back and forth, undecided:

    1) The regular Prius is not inexpensive. It has a lot of high tech technology in it. The PHV has even more technology and a higher tech battery. The car has a lot of high tech technology in it, and just like a smart phone, it's not inexpensive.

    2) Just like Henry Ford's vision with the Model-T, "A car in every driveway," Toyota wants to keep the Prius affordable to the average middle-class American (yes, we live in a global world today, but I'm using this as a reference point). And as Toyota and society moves forward, more toward plug-in hybrids and further away from gas guzzling 1900s technology, I'm sure Toyota should want to establish the Prius PHV as affordable to the middle class and not some super expensive car for the few.

    Understanding that the technology is expensive, I was hoping for a balance between these two; and hoping for a base price in the 20s, such as $29,900. They can then make up for this by selling option-loaded versions for $39K to the people that want to spend that amount. And they can make a Lexus version to rake in even more profits. They already have the CT200h.
     
  13. cwerdna

    cwerdna Senior Member

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    margins on nav systems

    Side note: In a conversation w/one ofne of my friends recently, he mentioned he had a friend who used to work at Nissan and told him about how high the profit margins on factory nav systems are. (I wouldn't surprise me given the amount of griping we all have about factory nav system prices, not to mention the price of updates.) I don't remember if upgraded stereos were included too.

    So, I wouldn't be surprised that part of the forced bundling of nav on the PiP, which forces you to compare prices to a nav equipped non-PiP is a means of essentially absorbing/masking (for lack of a better term) the costs of the battery and associated extra components and engineering.

    In other words, I suspect profit margins are equally high on Toyota factory nav on a regular Prius. Toyota might be willing to eat some/all of that margin on the PiP by including nav in order to help pay for the big li-ion battery, extra electronics, and the engineering effort.
     
  14. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    That's my guess, and Wayne Gerdes at cleanmpg mentioned the battery for the PHV is $7000, IIRC.
     
  15. Sergiospl

    Sergiospl Senior Member

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  16. ggood

    ggood Senior Member

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    Nice write up. The white pictures helped me to decide to stick with the blue.
     
  17. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Toyota had said a couple of years ago that battery costs were around $1200/kwh. The pack is 4.4kwh so that would be a cost $5280. Now, there is profit, warrenty, and dealer markup, but you need to also subtract the cost of the nimh battery also. The costs of the other changes do not depend on the size of the battery pack.

    Toyota has also said that they now expect to be able to reduce costs to $750/kwh by 2016. For competitive reference we know that ford is buying batteries for $750 in the transit connect, and can assume the ones for the focus ev and c-max energi are at that price or lower. GM and Nissan claim costs are lower than this also for their packs. Nissan claims that when the NA is chugging along they will be able to reduce costs to $375/kwh.
     
  18. fotomoto

    fotomoto Senior Member

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    The PPI won't be available in Texas for 2 years. How/when will you get one?
     
  19. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    People can still buy even if they don't live in one of the launch states. You just have to find a dealer and come to an agreement--they don't care where you live. I've been reassured that all Toyota dealerships will be able to do maintenance and repair on the PIP.
     
  20. ggood

    ggood Senior Member

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    Drop shipment from CA to TX (necessary to avoid CA taxes), which of course makes me a crazy SOB with no economic sense at all!