I haven't been able to get over 43mpg average on my 2010 Prius V. I've changed the air filter and cleaned my throttle body and maf sensor. Not sure why my mileage is so low? The wheels are standard 17 inch wheels, inflated to about 38 lbs. I don't have any drivability issues so I'm not sure what could be wrong. It only has 61,000 miles. I want to throw a can of injector cleaner in the car but I'm not sure I want chemicals going in the car without driving issues. Not driven on the highway much, mainly used to drop off kids to school and back. Any ideas?
"Not driven on the highway much, mainly used to drop off kids to school and back." I believe you answered your own question. Short hops kill FE. The 17" wheels seem to cost 1-2mpg compared to the 15". If the tires aren't original the replacements may not be LRR. If they aren't, figure another hit for a few percentage points.
Seems I've read many effortlessly get 50+ on the Gen3, the local driving on this car is quite a few miles a day, nothing like a 10 minute drive. But maybe it's just the local stop and go driving that's doing me in.
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10 min drives barely gets the ICE warmed up to optimal temps so that's your main culprit right there. BUT, you're getting much higher mileage than a non-hybrid!
They didn't have the 'v' in 2010. It's most likely the top trim 'V' when they were using roman numerals.
Actually none of my cars give me 50mpg. The highest mpg I get is on an 05 that gives me close to 48mpg on mixed highway and city driving. I was thinking the 2010 would be better but so far the 2010 is pretty much the worst one. It averages 43ish almost every tank. I'm wondering if the people getting 50mpg are constantly using the EV button? I don't like the car in ECO mode so it's always on the NORMAL setting. But I'm a bit disappointed at the 43mpg since all my other Gen2 get 45 and above.
The engine is programmed to run at high temperatures for emissions control and will still need to warm up.
To get to optimal efficiency the ICE still has to warm up, no matter the climate. In SoCal, it won't take as long as say Minnesota or Michigan, but after 10 min, the ICE has maybe a couple of min at optimal temps for efficiency. Also depends on the state of charge on the hybrid battery. I use a little bit of charge making the nearly 1 mile drive from the gate entrance of my community to my garage. Some mornings I only have 3 bars charge indicated by the time I drive from my garage to the gate. When I'm out on the road, my mileage is less while driving and charging the battery at the same time. That could be occurring with the OP too.
We've got basically the same car, 17" wheels (with Michelin Pilot tires). Up here it's called "touring". In winter I switch it over to Michelin X-Ice in 195/65R15, but that seems to work out about even. Our running average over the last 3 years is 46.5 mpg. It's been over 50 on a few tanks, lowest was 40.6. Our driving is a mix, a fair number of short trips, some longer: efficiency drops with short trips, comes back with longer. Best seems to be around town: out on the highway is good, but higher speeds and wind resistance start to take a toll. I'm wondering too: are the tires replacement, then what brand? You might also try raising the back with the parking brake off and see if the wheels are close to free spinning. With disk brakes there's always a little drag, but if it's significant maybe the parking brake cable is set too tight? And have the brakes ever been looked at? You want to ensure the calipers are floating freely, the mounting pins are not binding.
You should in most situations try to not worry about keeping in EV. Moderate exceleration, use gas pedal and try to feather it so as to coast a little bit when you can. Watch stop lights well in advance and try to time the lights to green, or you can slowly coast up to stop lights kind of like you have no brakes. Also watch this video. Max MPG Driving Techniques Youtube Video | PriusChat
My Gen2 doesn't have an EV button and I've only had 4 tanks under 50MPG, 3 mainly city driving in winter, 1 doing 75MPH on cruise with wind and hills. Most of the Prius' mileage is how you drive it, assuming its in good condition. If you're getting better mileage in your Gen2, you might have a mechanical issue, like the dragging brakes mentioned.
Just a after thought, if you can use a different route with less stop lights, signs, less stops the better! Also if you can drive to the farthest destination first warming up car, then work your way back home with a warm car. Pretty much anything less than 10 minutes is going to kill mileage.