I've watched the DVD, I've browsed through the manual and I still don't understand this car. After 2 weeks, I have 150 miles on the car and the battery display has never shown it to be more than half charged - mostly under half, like only highlighting/reading 3 bars. I'm averaging 28 mpg. I've driven in power mode and EV mode and neither seems to make a difference to the mpg. I've been on the Hwy with it, but due to construction zones haven't had it up past 60 mph. Most of the miles have been racked up on roads with speed limits of 35/40 mph. I guess what I'm asking, primarily, is should I be concerned about the battery not fully charging? And, is there a break-in period with this car like there was/is with American made autos?
You should avoid steady high speeds in the first 600 miles. The battery rarely exceeds 3/4 full and if it does it tries to get back to 3/4 full. On the rare occasions when looks "FULL" you will not be able to do regenerative braking (no where to put it) and will do engine braking instead.
New owners tend to fight the system, doing exactly what they shouldn't with the belief that will result in higher MPG. Things like trying to stay in EV as long as possible hurt efficiency. It's counter-intuitive, but that's the way it works. The best thing to do is shut off the displays. Just drive it for awhile and see what happens. Read through the forum in the meantime too. You'll learn about what to be aware of when you do start watching later.
I am not sure how any hybrid can pay off the higher cost unless you drive it. I do nine,times that,much driving and a Prius makes sense. At 3,600 miles a year, I would get a Versa.
Short trips are low MPG because it takes the system about 5 minutes to warm up. Air conditioning if on tends to bring batt charge down, so in summer one sees less full battery than in winter.
Thanks everyone for the input...it helps. I'm not driving long distances at the moment (3.8 miles round trip to work), but I expect that to change within the next few months...hence the desire for a fuel efficient, low maintenance, vehicle.
you're still operating on your first tank, which includes dealer abuse. you'll do much better after you refill and reset your trip meter. let's see, 75 miles/week, you should be refilling around august first. all the best!
Just remember that the warm- up stage gives the poorest fuel economy. 3 miles would just warm the cooling system. If you drive with a very light foot for this stage you will do better. For shorter distances like that a PIP would have been a good choice or a bike. H
Yes, and that means filling the tank about 4x per year. Darn! I was hoping for just 3 tanks per year.
You'll never get optimal mileage with a commute that short. The hybrid system won't be warmed up sufficiently to do you any good. Also, try inflating your tires to 40psi front/38psi rear. It's an easy modification -- and can be just as easily undone if you don't like the way the car rides with the higher pressures.
But note that it is still doing better than a traditional non-hybrid in the same service, which is saddled with the same warm-up issues. Trips that short are ideal of plug-in vehicles, and human powered transport.
I don't know how fast the battery pack looses a charge over time, but I know if you don't drive long, it has little chance to build up a charge. If you drove 40-50 miles a day, you'd definitely see that battery icon fill and discharge as you drive. A lot of my commute home is largely downhill, so I'm near full when I get on the last turn towards home.
Exactly. My previous car was getting 18 mpg. I've definitely improved that with just 165 miles on the odometer (I put 15 on yesterday) so I'm not overly concerned about the low mpg, just trying to understand this car and how to max it.