My milage and how much charge i get always drop when it turns cooler in central California on my 2013 prius plug-in. Cooler here as not very cold. Same for this year. Most my trips are about 5 miles out and i plug-in most of the time. I went 2000 miles at 255 mpg in oct./nov. But dropped to 750 miles on the next 2 fill ups. My long trip not plugging in winter mpg is 47-51 and summer 51-56 with the best late spring and late summer with no a/c or heater needed . Temperature will drop my charge range from summer of 11.1-12 miles and winter as low as 9.1 miles. I wonder what really cold does to the charge range. Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
Made the run from Phoenix to LA yesterday afternoon. Strong (40 to 50 mph) headwinds and blowing sands. Overall mileage on full tank 37 mpg. A few weeks ago I made the reverse trip LA to Quartzite with a similar tail wind. 68 mpg @ 77 mph (right on the cali legal limit )
I find it kind of strange, that wind and colder temperatures affect the Prius gas mileage so much. Is the battery that sensitive?
You really think it strange that winds affect a vehicle that gets a lot of its efficiency from its aerodynamics?
I ain't got no stinkin wind where I live. Just kidding. Only a little bit of wind occasionally. I do think it's weird that temperatures affects the battery. Shouldn't Toyota advise us of that fact? When they test these cars, they should also list the "winter" gas mileage. And all those guys on YouTube that test drive the Prius, they need to drive around in the winter and snow, and tell us what kind of gas mileage they're getting. That would be very good information for people who live in the cold weather states, don't you think? But I'm perfectly fine with 51 MPG. Where else are you going to get that??? I'd be happy with only 40!
Temperatures don't just directly affect the battery, or hybrid system, or engine. The car has an ambient temperature sensor, and as temperatures drop it intentionally changes engine and hybrid system behaviours. Delaying/reducing engine shut-off, for example. It's sort of an edict from on high. You can reduce the effects, by for example: lowering cabin temperature setting. Setting the vent system to Auto and then lowering cabin temp setting is a one-two punch I find will push the car to cross the engine shut-down threshold, especially when halfway through warm-up. And on top of that is the direct effects: greater heater demands, coolant taking longer to warm.
COMPLICATED! I keep saying it, and I'll repeat it again... this is the most complicated and confusing vehicle I have ever owned. I realize it's a "hybrid" at all, but can't they still make it simple? I'm glad we only have ONE season out here. (OK, maybe one and a half. We get a slight "winter.") So I will know what to expect as far as gas mileage goes. Between 51 and 64. LOL! Those people that drive in extreme cold and snowy conditions, their mileage may vary from 18 mpg to 35 mpg? Or whatever. If I lived in those conditions, I would top off my gas tank at least once a week.
All cars get worse gas mileage in the winter, except plugins - They tend to get less range which amounts to the same thing. You can't have the magic without a complicated system powering it
Keep in touch, prodigy. Let us know what kind of gas mileage you get in the snows of Virginia. (Beautiful state, by the way.) Now that I am older, retired, etc., I usually refuel my car when it reaches 1/2 tank left. Or 1/4. I don't need to hyper-mile, I know the car gets good gas mileage. I don't need to play with it. So I just use caution, and make sure I always have enough gas. (And buy a hot dog while refueling. )
I have a new theory on poor winter mileage. I have noticed with the scangauge that ICE coolant temp will drop very fast when the engine turns off, especially if I'm venting the heat into the cabin with the heater. I have a lot of stop lights and stuff where I will lose temp and it spends a lot of the drive at around 160F instead of 195. I figure it's probably not as efficient at that temperature. And the battery can be 20-30 degrees cooler as well on some trips - I would imagine the same is true of it. It's probably more pronounced on a hybrid because the engine being off causes the coolant temperature to drop in ways a regular car wouldn't experience.
I know the Gen 2 Prius actually had a thermos bottle to keep the coolant warm. I have not noticed that on my Gen 4, though.
It is simple, buddy. All you have to do is select climate automatic and leave it there. Then all you ever need is to alter the temperature to suit and turn it off/on as required, just like your old car.
I don't understand. Well at least the temp setting: that's always your prerogative; you pick a temperature. Or am I misunderstanding? Fan speed: yeah once you set a speed it's locked. To unlock just hit auto again.
I don't know Mendel, I just do it the simple old-fashioned way. I really don't need all this "auto" stuff. If everything gets too convenient, I might doze off while driving! Too many hamburgers makes me sleepy.
Auto Eco for climate control will help you get your good mileage even in PWR mode. It sets fan speed, which vents, and recirculated or fresh air to meet the temperature setting. Front defrost also turns off Auto. Set your temperature to 32 as the "keep awake" temperature
My mistake, set the temperature as required, Then press Auto! If you try to change the fan speed in auto you will take it out of auto, but shouldn't if you alter the set temperature while on auto to the best of my knowledge.
I think, if you set the fan speed while in Auto, it's takes the fan speed off Auto, ie: the fan speed is locked, at whatever you set. But mode will continue to be automatically chosen, say vent, vs high/low, vs heat, vs heat/defog. If you set a mode, then that too is locked, at whatever you set. And that's more-or-less all Auto does, if I'm not mistaken.