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NiMH vs Li-Ion battery - what's the deal?

Discussion in 'Gen 4 Prius Technical Discussion' started by pakitt, Apr 6, 2016.

  1. pakitt

    pakitt Senior Member

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    So, I read now on this review of the Prius Gen4 that:
    "Every trim level above the base model is packing a new 0.75 kWh (3.6 ampere hour) lithium-ion battery pack that is physically more compact and about 35 pounds lighter than before. Less weight means more efficient acceleration and braking for the new Prius. The base "Prius Two" trim level makes use of the same 1.31 kWh (6.5 ampere hour) nickel metal-hydride battery pack as the previous generation."

    And that:
    "The new lithium ion battery pack, for example, has a smaller total capacity, but that's only half the story. Hybrid vehicles never use all of their total capacity because fully discharging or recharging a battery can reduce its effective lifespan and these batteries have to serve the driver for 10-plus years. So the old NiMH battery pack only used about 40-percent of its total capacity. The new Li-ion pack has a much larger 70-percent effective capacity. So the effective capacity of both battery packs is is the same 0.525-ish kWh, but the Li-ion pack has the additional efficiency advantage of being about 40-percent lighter -- more from less.".

    So, effectively both battery packs provide the same "electric" capacity to drive the car, but one weighs less being smaller and lighter (the Li-Ion).
    So the question is: the Gen4s delivered in the USA with Li-Ion, all have a spare tire or repair kit?
     
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  2. JohnF

    JohnF Active Member

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    I think the review has it wrong. The NiMH in the Gen 4 Model 2 is NOT the same as the NiMH in the Gen 3: an improved NiMH technology is used. Sorry, I forget Toyota's name for it.

    Of the 5 Li-ion models in the US,

    3 have a patch kit:
    Model 2 ECO
    Model 4
    Model 4 Touring (17" wheels)

    and 2 have a spare:

    Model 3
    Model 3 Touring (17" wheels)
     
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  3. breakfast

    breakfast Active Member

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    Toyota is absolutely using the Li batteries to add other options (like sunroof, power seats, and other things that are heavy) while staying in the lower weight class. Toyota is also using spare tires for the same purpose -- that's why models with those options don't have spare tires.

    It isn't "manipulation of car weight class", though - lower weight is lower weight, and scales don't lie.

    I *hate* to see options such as spare tires unavailable in the higher trim levels - which ironically have other safety options available! So if you want all the active safety features and the spare tire, you can move to the 3, but you can't have NiMH, or any of the amenities in the 4. If you want, say, all the active safety features and power seats and/or sunroof, you can move to the 4, but you can't have NiMH or the spare tire.
     
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  4. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    I like to be a skeptic...are you sure we can rule out manipulation?
    The weight class management may also have to do with EPA MPG rating read-across to models in the same weight class.
     
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  5. JohnF

    JohnF Active Member

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    I think it is manipulation, in several ways:
    (1) As I get it, Toyota got the Model 2 ECO down to a low enough weight to slip into the next lower weight class, because somehow the formulas would raise its EPA MPG rating.
    (2) Then they juggled option weights and spare /no spare to keep all the other models in the next class up. Then among the other versions, they chose for EPA testing the models which would give the highest numbers on the EPA test. Then they submitted documentation that these would be the highest-selling versions (adjusting production to ensure that this would be true). This enabled them to claim the same EPA ratings for all 5 of the other models, so customers would think there was no MPG penalty for going to the higher classes, especially ones with the 17" wheels.

    If I understand all this correctly, it seems like exactly what one would do if one is smart and wants to sell cars. I think we all hope that Toyota is smart?

    Underneath it all I suspect that the Model 2 ECO is not actually much different from the other models in terms of MPG. It's a rating difference to get suckers like me to buy. But I'm a happy sucker!
     
    #85 JohnF, May 11, 2016
    Last edited: May 11, 2016
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  6. breakfast

    breakfast Active Member

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    It's not manipulation of the rules, though, and it's not fraud in my opinion. Lower weight does improve MPG***. The weight of each Prius model is undeniably true, so it deserves to be classified in the weight guidelines set forth by the EPA.

    My point is that it's *not* like Volkswagen, who (as alleged by the EPA) manipulated their diesel emissions control software to run their engine lean *only during situations that approximate the EPA test cycle, which are basically impossible to replicate in real world conditions.


    ***There are also several other modifications made to the 2 Eco, and the reports from the Gen 4 board certainly indicate an MPG boost to the 2 Eco due to these modifications.
     
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  7. JohnF

    JohnF Active Member

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    I agree 100% that it's not manipulation of the rules or fraud. I said it was "manipulation", meaning manipulation (or configuration if you prefer) of the models Toyota produced, not the rules. "Manipulation within the rules" might be a better way to say it.

    The VW matter is completely different: they didn't manipulate the rules, they simply flouted the rules. Cheater software had already been prosecuted in diesel trucks, so it was clearly deemed illegal.
     
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  8. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Regardless, it failed a sale two weeks ago when I tested a Level 3 with TSSP and found the MPG on 5 mile loop at 28 mph returned 99.1 MPG. Good but not good enough.

    Bob Wilson
     
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  9. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Less weight does equal better fuel economy, and on the EPA test, the road load for the dynamometer is based upon coast down tests, which are influenced by the car's weight. I admit, that I have no idea what weight class means for the EPA test. it could just be a cutoff for when a model's trims require their own testing.

    On the other side of the Pacific, Japan's fuel economy testing does not use a coast down test to determine the road load. it is based upon what weight class the car falls into, with the dynamometer resistance set by the weight class. The Eco is light enough to fall into the lighter class there, so it is tested against an easier load. While lighter cars should have a lighter load, the Japanese weight class the ECO falls into is also used for cars that can be a few hundred pounds lighter than it. It's not illegal, but does give the car an edge on the test that may not be reflected in the real world.
     
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  10. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    Bob are you saying the cold MPG was too low for you?
     
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  11. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    The car was warmed up and it was 72F outside. I can get 99.1 MPG with our Gen-3 on that test segment and have in the past:
    [​IMG]
    Good, it was not good enough.

    As part of this 1,000 mile tank, I would do laps on the loop:
    [​IMG]

    But this graph shows the real problem:
    [​IMG]
    The math model is accurate and the results credible. In a year, the Level 2 ECO will have TSSP and if I don't wind up with a BMW i3-Rex, the problem is solved. Look at the relative performance:
    • 117 MPGe - 150 mile range ($28k(?), 6,500 miles) … can reach Nashville
    • 56 MPG - 633 mile range ($28k set, 10 miles)
    • 50 MPG - 595 mile range (paid, 70,000 miles)
    There are technical aspects of the i3-Rex that rule out other plug-ins: city-sized, lack of "B" pillar, rear-wheel drive, 168 hp, tow-bar available, and charge sustaining mode patch. The premium gas and 2 gallon tank is not great but a nice challenge … and I have plans for both. <GRINS>

    Bob Wilson
     
    #91 bwilson4web, May 12, 2016
    Last edited: May 12, 2016
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  12. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    If I understand you find the Gen4-Model 3 is only getting 91.8 MPG at 28 MPH so not as good as your Gen3 in this test. Are your results being discussed in more detail on another thread I should be looking at?
     
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  13. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Bob Wilson
     
    #93 bwilson4web, May 12, 2016
    Last edited: May 12, 2016
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  14. Wankel

    Wankel Junior Member

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    Maybe same electric capacity but 2 things remains unknown :
    Lifetime NIMH vs LI-ION
    Charging capacity (did the li-ion charge faster than nimh???)
     
  15. JohnF

    JohnF Active Member

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    Wankel, I think pretty much that whole section of the review is gibberish. The two batteries do not have the same "electric" capacity: 0.75kWh is not "the same" as 1.31kWh. And the new NiMH battery is improved over the NiMH that was in the Gen 3. See pages 12 and 13 of this pdf:
     
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  16. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    They have about the same amount of usable capacity with the max and minimum SOC limits in place for long life.

    The 7 seater Prius v/Alpha/plus has used a lithium battery since its introduction. So do all the current competitor hybrids. This is about as much time out in the public as NiMH had before the gen2 Prius arrived.
     
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  17. pakitt

    pakitt Senior Member

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    I still don't understand the difference in daily life of the need of 2 different battery chemistries. It's still not clear at all to me.
    It seems to me that NiMH have the same performance as the LiIon version. Or otherwise said the difference is negligible in normal daily driving.
    Again, what's the deal?
    Or otherwise said, are the models with NiMH sold in EU consuming markedly more than the ones sold in USA/Japan (?) with Li-Ion?
     
    #97 pakitt, May 12, 2016
    Last edited: May 12, 2016
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  18. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Don't know if it has been mentioned yet, but the cost for NiMH is likely as low as it is going to be for Toyota. Li-ion will be cheaper in the future, if they aren't already. But Toyota still has much invested in the NiMH supply chain to just simply switch like the others have done.
     
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  19. Former Member 68813

    Former Member 68813 Senior Member

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  20. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Yes and no. Toyota probably does want to stay within the same weight class. if not, it has to submit a 3rd set of EPA figures for the trim that goes above it. Given that it's most likely the top-of-the-line version, it's not worth the cost of testing or submitting the application.

    Seeing the numbers here, I'm wondering if they submitted a Three Touring? The EPA numbers seem to match those with the Touring and the non-Tourings seem to consistently beating the EPA. It would allow for a greater difference for the Two Eco for marketing purposes, as well keep everyone happy (Touring owners match the EPA and non-Touring beat the EPA). I wouldn't be surprised if the Three/Four are rated at 54mpg combined if they were actually tested. It would be closer to the 10% gain that Toyota was aiming for (an arbitrary +1mpg for the 2017 vs. 2008-2016 testing lol).

    Weight. The idea is that Li-Ion isn't used for a performance boost like other manufacturers, but rather used for weight reduction so that Toyota can offer more features in the Prius without increasing the weight of the top model.

    The new Gen 4's NiMH battery weighs 40.3kg. The Li-Ion is 32.4kg (it's 324.5kg in the Japanese press release so that's a typo). This means Toyota has an extra 7.9kg to play with in terms of added equipment.
     
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