Hi guys, I bought a 2008 Prius Gen II and very impressed with the performance and I am very excited every time I drive my prius. I am planning to travel to Mt. Washington Road Show with my Prius. Does any one already Traveled top of Mt.Washington Road Show new hampshire. If yes can some one suggest what all the things do I need to take care Suresh
I'd suggest contacting "Hobbit" on this site. You can look him up by that username on this here. 100% positive he's been to the top of Mt. Washington more than once with his Prius...he has a bumper sticker on the back of his car that says so!
I think so. Just now I saw the website of Mt. Evans and it looks similar. Mt. Evans is of 8,700 feet and Mt. Washington is of 6,288 feet.
Snow tires, and if the weather is bad don't try it. On the way up don't be afraid to floor the gas pedal when needed, and on the way down shift to "B" instead of "riding" the brakes (that is, pressing the brake pedal continuously for minutes at a time).
Thanks Richard. Way down shift to "B" means still we have to use breaks if the down hill is very steep. if down hill is not that steep then can continue with "B" with out giving gas. Please correct me if I am wrong.
When you get to the gate, the guys will say "hmmm, you have a very unusual car!" [which is becoming less and less true...] and hand you a piece of paper that has their own rehash of B-mode which goes over the basics. The facility director isn't sure if he wrote it based on my original rundown on it or another source like something Toyota gave him, but bottom line is yes, you want to use B, probably all the way down. Once the battery is topped up [within the first 500 ft of descent, it will be] you're on engine-braking and the physical brakes the rest of the way, and the engine's no slouch at dissipating energy in its own right and doesn't powder off brake lining in the process. . If B is holding you back too much, you can pick up a little speed by just dropping to D for a moment, and then back to B to maintain control. But it's probably not worth trying to go much faster on the straights, as they're not that long. We don't want to see any prius-shaped cairns marking the trails up there. . I certainly didn't floor it on the way up. I don't think I topped 2600 RPM the whole way up. That's still a lot of power relative to speed when you're going 15 - 20 mph, and more than that is not needed or safe. Your radiator fans will still run, though. . And if driving up instead of hiking makes you feel guilty, you need one of *my* bumper stickers rather than the stock one they give you! [I've actually got nine more of them, and should just sell the rest off at cost.] . _H*
On the 2010, switching momentarily to D is unnecessary. Just push down slightly on the gas pedal to reduce the holdback. It doesn't actually burn fuel, but just reduces the engine braking. It sounds and feels weird to have the engine slow down by pressing the gas pedal harder, but there is nothing illogical about it, as you are just modulating the engine braking function. I cannot speak for pre-2010 models.
Correct, that's an alternate way to do it but possibly easier to overdo a little, and harder to regulate. Pushing the go-pedal a little removes *all* the drag and more or less has the same effect as moving to N, where going to D still applies a little drag. . This also points up how D and B are NO different except in a complete feet-off-pedals condition! . _H*
You are correct. Start by using the brakes. If you need the brakes for a long time, shift to "B". Continue using the brakes if needed. If you want to speed up a little for a short time you can either shift back to "D" or touch the gas pedal. After, if you forget to shift back to "D", continuing in "B" will do no damage but it will reduce fuel economy. (But never use "N" while driving! The only time for "N" is when the car is being pulled through an automatic car wash.)
Thanks for your detailed explanation. I will follow the same and take prius to the top of Mt.Washington and come back using "B" gaer safely.
This must have been changed for the 2010. I find it fairly easily to regulate the degree of engine braking in my 2010, and got a lot of practice with it in MT-WY-CO over the past few weeks. Since the OP has a 2008, it won't apply to his Mt. Washington trip. Very true!
I gave away one of my spare stickers yesterday. I was out doing sort of a comparo-run between two GPSes [and there's a GIANT rant forming about how astoundingly dumbed-down the Nuvi series is] and had pulled into a little lot in a state park, and a lady and two daughters came strolling up behind the car as I was poking buttons and I could hear her sort of reading parts of what's on the rear end out loud and remarking on the Mt. Washington sticker. . I furiously debated whether I should try to sell her one or just give her one for about a second and a half, rolled the window down farther and after describing a little how it was created with a little image-editing work, said "would you like one?" ... the daughters got the bright idea to use it as an xmas-present to their father, who will likely get an even bigger kick out of it than the mom. Yes, they've been up the mountain. . Spreadin' the love... . _H*
Said rant wasn't done yet when you asked, but now it is in case you didn't catch the ref in the garmin-vs-tomtom-vs-prius thread. . _H*
We took our 2002 up Mt Washington, up Pikes peak and up Sandia Crest. We passed a lot of car going up all of them. We had to stop and 1/2 way down Pikes Peak due to brake temp. That was caused the car in front of us running 10 mph and B mode would not keep the Prius slow enough. It was hot day about 3/4 of the cars had to stop and cool brakes. We were right on the border line the Ranger suggested we stop but said we didn't have to but since we didn't have a first gear he thought it would be best. Our trip down Sandia Crest and heading west resulted in out best gas mileage ever.