That's no big deal for an automaker, which is what the comment was in reference to. Post-Purchase upgrades from automakers is new territory. They're starting with software, in fact. Seeing battery-packs later on isn't too unreasonable to imagine, especially if they don't want to supply original parts for countless years for warranty coverage. Why not offer upgrades? It sure would raise resell value for the brand.
Its about the same weight, just 1 kg lighter (2.2 lbs) or 2.4% of the pack. My bet is it has similar amounts of active material, but it is packaged smaller to fit in the new better location. Its the lithium one that is significantly lighter, but it has less capacity. Usable SOC and power levels have not been disclosed, or I have missed them. For the gen II and III SOC is 40%-80% (520 wh) and max power is 27 kw (gen III) or 25kw (gen II) depending on air cooling. If these are the same electronics would probably work, but the new battery might have different power levels, SOC, or temperature dependancies. We should know all those things once it is released. My guess is they power has been slightly increased again, but that may be dependant on airflow/fan to cool properly.
Nah. A battery pack is more just its cells. It includes the connection between the cells and stacks, the case, and possibly electronics that monitor the packs condition. With the same volts and amps as the previous battery, the cells are likely the same. Which means Toyota came up with a cost effective way to make the rest of the pack smaller. Toyota may feel the cells can be packed closer together without worry about heat now, or the old pack was sturdier in case of rear collisions, or for another reason.
Well I've already noticed one speed bump. The new battery both wires from and cools from the passenger side. Gen 2 wires from the driver's side. I just hope its cheaper. I don't want a $3,000 bullet hanging over my head. NY is not an extended warranty state. Come-on Toyota, take the fear out. I like my Prius, but I'm not married to it. Will evaluate the field, but not GM. Gen 4 is interesting. VW diesel will be cheap when software fix comes out. Have a Honda appreciation as well. Subaru boxer with manual, nice.
I don't see why you'd need a new battery if your old one goes out. Aren't salvage batteries out there, or won't they be out there? Plus, by the time it goes out, if it does before something else, they should be a lot cheaper. A new hybrid battery on an 8 yr old car with 200K miles on it would most likely be an over kill.
I think NY is partial CARB state. My warranty covered the battery for 10 years 100,000 miles. That felt like a great warranty when I bought the car and it probably was. I hit 100k in January 2012. I've had the battery roulette pistol pointed at my head since then. Don't worry, I'm not losing any sleep its just a figure of speech. Four years ago the car would have been worth new battery. If I suffered a failure today I'd be looking at a salvage battery for about $1,000 vs scrapping the car. The car has been zapping me lately for wheel bearings and bushings. With 150k where do you draw the line?
Strongly believe NY has 10-yrs 150k miles on HV battery. We don't have 10-yr 100-k miles as a warranty option anywhere: The Federal option is 8-yrs 100k miles. The only reason CARB warranty might not apply in NY is if the a used car came from non-CARB state, but not many non-CARB states surrounding NY. Don't pull the trigger!
OK that could be true, but Toyota tends to give assistance anyway especially if you live in a CARB state. But the key point here is reference to the next gen Prii and it was stated that NY is not extended CARB for the nextgen Prius Gen4 (but NY is extended CARB).
CA OR RI ME MA MD NJ VT NY CT should be the extended warranty on batt PA, DE, WA no extension on batt warranty Also NY I think joined CARB in 2004 so seems to me the Goldy 2005 should be fully covered if it's a NY vehicle.