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Is Gen 5 Prius really better-looking than Gen 4 Prius Prime?

Discussion in 'Gen 5 Prius Main Forum' started by Gokhan, May 24, 2023.

  1. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Has Toyota said anything about the new one's fuel economy? I don't see how it can beat the Prius trim vs trim.
     
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  2. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    51 mpg city/53 mpg highway/52 mpg combined.

    Gen 5 Prius XLE/Limited get 52/52/52 mpg. XLE/Limited AWD and Prime XSE/XSE Premium get less. Since most people like to drive their cars fast, the EPA highway rating will be weighted more in real-life driving for most, and Camry should beat the most common Prius trims in fuel economy, thanks to its more powerful engine.
     
  3. asj2009

    asj2009 Member

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    That 75 mpg is insane!

    The 6 miles per kwh is also damn good, and much better than the PHEV I drive, which gets around 3.2 miles/kwh

    As to the color, I love it, but I am still not sold on the gen4 looks. It's like a transitional state between the bulbous previous gens and the now gen 5. But hey, I love the gen 2 and 3 looks (I even make it a point to approach gen 2 owners and say how i like their car!), and that makes me weird in many people's eyes lol
     
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  4. asj2009

    asj2009 Member

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    If the Camry is larger and heavier, then yeah, no way.
     
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  5. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    It is easy to get a 38-mile BEV range in the city, which shows as about 6.3 mi/kWh on the display. I can get close to 35 miles on the highway (5.8 mi/kWh on the display) if I can keep my speed at 57 mph on the speedometer (55 mph actual).

    My true (at-the-pump) lifetime average in mixed driving (mostly highway) without electricity use is about 67 mpg. Gen 4 Prius Prime naturally uses some battery SOC even in the HEV mode; so, that brings it up to over 70 mpg if you discount that. 75 mpg true mpg without electricity use is not that difficult to achieve. I achieved 120 mpg in long freeway stop-and-go drives. The mpg starts rapidly dropping at speeds over 62 mph on the speedometer (60 mph actual). So, Gen 4 Prius Prime shines at speeds below 60 mph.
     
    #365 Gokhan, Apr 12, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2024
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  6. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    Does it really help the Gen 5 Prius to have a hatch given that its trunk space is so tiny? You will get a much larger cargo volume with the new 2025 Camry.

    The new 2025 Camry might perhaps even come with a spare tire. ;)
     
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  7. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Those numbers seem to be speculation from the press using a 10% increase. The Prius has seen less between generations. The next Camry is using the same engine as the current one. I say a 10% improvement to be on the high end

    The current Camry has 15 cubic feet of trunk space. The previous two generations had around the same, which is like what most midsize sedans had. The gen5 has 24. Throw a spare in the back, and there will still be 20 to 21 cubic feet of space. The Taurus might have had 20cuft in the trunk, and it still didn't have the versatility for carrying stuff like a hatch.
     
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  8. Mr.Vanvandenburg

    Mr.Vanvandenburg Senior Member

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    Toyota may want to buy your car back and study it. I don’t understand fashion in cars. It’s a can on wheels to me. The back is so wild though. When they came out I thought, that’s the most hideous back of a car ever made. Now I have one, because it seems to be a good car for me. The back deck lid is functional. I do like the two tone gray interior on mine.

    This was car fashion too. 1959 Mercury.
    upload_2024-4-12_15-18-21.jpeg
     
    #368 Mr.Vanvandenburg, Apr 12, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 12, 2024
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  9. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    Ah, OK, 51 mpg city/53 mpg highway/52 mpg combined are the EPA numbers for the previous-generation 2024 Camry HEV. Why do you think that the new-generation 2025 Camry HEV will get less?
     
  10. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    Exactly—a can on wheels—and neither Gen 4 nor Gen 5 is high in the aesthetics department for average people. If I were primarily shopping for looks, there are much better-looking cars out there, but I got my Prius Prime for being a green car.
     
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  11. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    Hybrid Camry much less future plug-in Camrys will be the demise of Prius because who wants to have to contort to get into a very low car compared to the camry. The taller a person is, the more likely this is to be the case.
    .
     
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  12. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    I think Toyota knew that going all-hybrid across all their vehicles was the end of the Prius, and that's why they came up with the radical new Gen 5 "non-Prius" design, which sacrificed a great deal of fuel economy, interior and cargo space, and convenience, with the hope that the Gen 5 non-Prius could be a sort of a boutique car that could still draw some buyers.
     
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  13. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    Those numbers are for the US hybrid LE. Toyota put effort into getting a better EPA rating for that than they did for the Prius Eco. The other trims are 44 city/ 47 highway/ 46 combined.

    A 10% improvement will make that 48/52/51. Past Camry hybrids small bigger gains between gens than the Prius, but I think they benefited from more improvements. Can't look at the transition between the last two gens. The Camry went from the old port injected engine to the dynamic force direct&port injection. The ICE model saw a 18% improvement from that. Then with it being hybrid only, I would guess Toyota focused more on cost savings than best efficiency improvement.

    It wasn't a great deal of fuel economy. The LE is a little lower than the gen 4 Eco, and the rest of the line up is essentially the same. Past generations only increased 4% to maybe 10% over the old. Meanwhile, the gen5 gets a big performance boost in other areas.

    The Prius was always more focused on the Japanese market. It could be viewed as a fancier option to the Corolla. Like the Venza to the Rav4 and Crown to the Camry.
     
  14. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    There was really no effort.

    Camry HEV LE used a lithium-ion HEV battery vs. a NiMH HEV battery in the higher trims during the EPA tests, which is the main reason for the lower mpg numbers for the higher trims. It looks like at some point in the generation, more or less all trims switched to a lithium-ion HEV battery. That's also what happened with the Prius Eco vs. Prius EPA tests. Initially, only the Prius Eco had the lithium-ion HEV battery, which resulted in much higher mpg numbers for it in the EPA tests. Later, all trims except the AWD trims got the lithium-ion HEV battery, but Toyota never bothered to retest the higher trims with the lithium-ion HEV battery.

    I am sure that all 2025 Camry trims will use a lithium-ion HEV battery.

    The only other differences are the wheel size (16" on the LE vs. 18" or 19" on the higher trims) and 100 lb more weight on the higher trims.

    Consumer Reports tested the HEV LE, and it is the top-rated vehicle among all vehicles. If I got one, I would get the HEV LE, as it is a lot cheaper than the higher trims.

    This is what Consumer Reports said:

    Best version to get

    The LE hybrid is the best version with its 47 mpg, no compromise to acceleration or trunk space, and a quieter engine. Additional benefits include standard automatic climate control, heated seats and electronic parking brake, all for around $30,000. Note that the LE hybrid gets better fuel economy than the SE and XLE hybrid trims because it uses a lithium-ion battery.


    Consumer Reports top-four vehicles among all new cars and SUVs—overall/road-test scores:

    1. 2024 Toyota Camry HEV LE—93/94
    2. 2024 BMW X5 XDrive40i—92/94
    3. 2024 Honda Accord HEV Sport—89/96
    4. 2024 BME X5 XDrive50e PHEV—88/98

    These four vehicles are outliers in the ratings, well ahead of all the other vehicles.
     
    #374 Gokhan, Apr 12, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 13, 2024
  15. Tightwad77

    Tightwad77 New Member

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    One more thing to add . If they took away the more expensive aluminum hood. Carbon fiber hatch and HUD , what did a gen 5 buyer get in place ? Bigger less efficient wheels that ride worse. Nice
     
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  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk EGR Fanatic

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    The fog light delete is no loss; they were a joke.
     
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  17. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    What's the difference between the Prius LE and higher trims again?

    The wheels.

    The US Camry Hybrid LE got 16" steel wheels in order for it to reach that 50mpg rating for advertising. In Canada, it gets the 17" alloys the ICE model has, and doesn't reach 50mpg.

    Toyota is leveraging Li-ion here for weight savings. The two chemistries have about the same usable capacity. NiMH's buffer requirements means its total capacity is about 50% more than the Li-ion. That adds to weight in addition to its lower specific energy.
     
  18. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    No… You still don't get it.

    It has nothing (or very little) to do with the wheels and weight.

    Lithium-ion cells have a much higher Coulombic efficiency than NiMH cells—99.9% vs. 70%. This is the reason for the huge difference in fuel economy between the LE and higher trims.

    BU-808c: Coulombic and energy efficiency with the battery—Battery University

    Do you think that Gen 4 Prius Eco got 4-mpg-better fuel economy than Gen 4 Prius because it is 30 lb (1%) lighter? Of course not. The mass only contributes to the fuel economy in the EPA tests through Newton's second law (F = ma), and especially for hybrids, the effect will be much smaller, as you regain the energy spent during acceleration through regenerative braking during deceleration. So, 1% lighter could perhaps result in 0.1% better fuel economy for a hybrid.

    2025 Camry will use a lithium-ion battery across all trims, and therefore, there will not be a loss in Coulombic efficiency in the higher trims due to a NiMH battery. There could be a small difference due to larger wheels, but that would be no more than about 2 mpg. There won't be anything radical like you see in Gen 5 Prius where they totally messed up the aerodynamics of the car by going berserk with 19" wheels on a tiny car.
     
    #378 Gokhan, Apr 13, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 13, 2024
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  19. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    The gen4 Eco isn't 30 pounds lighter than the test car for the others' EPA rating. The test calls for using the one with the worse emissions among the trims, which is usually the heaviest. the Eco is 65 pounds lighter, plus the rear wiper delete does improve the aerodynamics for the coast down test. The gen5 LE has a better weight advantage over the higher trims, but the same aero and battery, and it is 4mpg better than them.
    Edit: the Prius/higher trims EPA might also include larger wheels.

    But we are talking about the Camry hybrid LE. The Canadian one is listed at about 8 pounds lighter than the US one. 2024 Toyota Camry & Camry Hybrid Specifications | Toyota Canada Perhaps a minor feature difference, more likely it's in the rounding rules used So identical cars except in the wheels. As mentioned before, Canada gets a slightly larger alloy wheel than the US. The tires are also 10mm wider.

    Canada uses the EPA tests. Canada LE is rated 48 city/49 highway/ 48 combined. Smaller wheels and slightly narrower tires can improve mpg by 3 to 6. Using NiMH, plus 85 to 100 more pounds, plus bigger wheels and slightly wider tires, can reduce mpg by 2 to 4.
     
    #379 Trollbait, Apr 13, 2024
    Last edited: Apr 13, 2024
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  20. Gokhan

    Gokhan Senior Member

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    It is the same wheels on the Eco and higher trims.

    A small mass difference doesn't explain the huge mpg difference, especially for a hybrid with regenerative braking. If that were the case, you could easily get 80 mpg by weight-saving measures. Conversely, if you were carrying a passenger, your fuel economy would drop from 60 mpg to 30 mpg. The aerodynamic effect of the rear wiper is negligible as well.

    The reason for the huge mpg difference is the difference in the Coulombic efficiency for lithium-ion (99.9%) and NiMH (70%).