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2009 Prius BIGGER and FASTER (Yeah better mileage too)

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by Tempus, Apr 28, 2008.

  1. rpatterman

    rpatterman Thinking Progressive

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    2009 Prius, Bigger Faster


    Don't want bigger or faster, I want a 100 mpg PHEV.
    If Toyota follows standard car company plan of always bigger and faster they will lose the niche (cult?) market that they have created.
    Unlike the last 4 years, two years from now we will have many high-tech, high-MPG options. The Prius will only be one of many choices.
    To hang on to their current niche they need to push the limits with FE, not create another midsize sedan.
    Toyota needs to realize that $4/gallon gas changes all the old school theories about running a car company.
    Thanks to george w. any model plans formulated two years ago ($2/gal) are obsolete.

    Toyota made a similar mistake by putting hybrid tech in the Highlander rather than the RAV. A RAV Hybrid would have by far the best FE
    of any 4wd/AWD on the road and would have captured all the buyers who need 4wd but feel guilty about the carbon footprint.
    Instead their first Hybrid SUV is just another midsize SUV with good (not great) FE.
    My loyalty to Toyota only lasts as long as they are a FE/PHEV leader, not follower.

    Bigger: -If I want bigger I could buy a Camary Hybrid.

    -Two bikes and camping gear for a week in Jackson Hole, no problem.
    -Three adult skiers with skis (inside), no problem.
    -Double date, no problem.
    -Annual trip to Costco, no problem.
    -Pickup 5 rowdy teenagers at school, no way (thank God!)
    -Works great for 95%+ of my needs

    Faster: -Kansas State Patrol tells me it does 104 mph (since it was Christmas he wrote ticket for 94)
    -Three adult skiers with skis, 75 mph+ all the way up to Eisenhower Tunnel, no problem.
    -With studded snows, no problem skiing powder days (4-8") Over 8" I let one of my friends with a SUV drive (wait a minute, there are no friends on powder days!)
    -My daily commute involves a steep, long climb out of Boulder that I regularly drive at 80 mph+, not because I am a Type A, speed demon, but
    because I consider it my personal mission to demonstrate to all the SUV drivers that the Prius is a fun car, not some windup toy.
    -At $4/gal everyone is slowing down, not speeding up. We will see 55mph again! Would rather slow down than sell my soul to the Saudis.

    MPG: -With my heavy right foot I am happy to get 45 (half city/half highway).
    -For fun I like to reset mileage on top of Loveland Pass or Trail Ridge Road and coast back to Boulder and see how many days I can keep at "99".
    -My Ford Ranger gets better gas mileage since I have had my Prius because 1) the instant feed back of the mileage gauge has made me a better driver
    and 2) I never drive it (200 miles since Sept).

    Will drive my 2004 until someone comes out with significant FE improvement or PHEV.
     
  2. bob2780

    bob2780 Junior Member

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    Hi Everyone
    Here is why Gen3 is a sellout the Gen3 will give us only an incremental change
    Sorry to say that Toyota missed the boat THEY KNUCKLED UNDER Remember the 1996 Toyota Rav4 EV
    110 Mi range 80mph Panasonic EV95 12 volt battery 95amp/hr NIMH its pack of 24 = 288V 27KW

    Sometime in 2001-2002 Chevron/Texaco/GM sued Toyota/Panasonic so they could not Sell or distribute or manufacture the battery they also limited the size of future battery build they had a better battery then the batteries in GM EV1 Thats why GM killed it and killed RELIABLE SAFE EV BAT TECH for a decade
    so That’s why The Prius Has only a 1KW battery and NO EV range and no new rav4 EVS
    The electric motors in the Prius are capable of 80mph IT PROBABLY THE SAME MOTOR THAT WAS IN THE RAV4 EV

    People that still own Rav 4 EV'S are still running the original battery
    Also the Chevron Energy cartel above own the battery patents for Lion technology thats why the expensive pack with its stability issues

    They also have the same powersize restrictions that’s why the Tesla has some 6000 Cells

    the hypermotion battery pack for the PRIUS PHEV is 5kw and the Ni-lar NMMH BIPOLAR battery IS 4 KW as compared to the 27kw pack of the shelved EV-95
    That is why $4.00 gas and more THE CHEVRON ENERGY CARTEL are the REAL OPEC
    in a recent interview the head of Chevron battery tech stated NIMH IS READY NOW dah
    sorry for the rant guys and gals
    BOB2780
     
  3. Rybold

    Rybold globally warmed member

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    If slightly larger size and more power is what it takes to get MORE of the mainstream public interested in hybrids, then I'm all for it. It is better to have 50% of America driving hybrids than to have 10% of America driving hybrids.

    Let us not forget though, that Toyota has already said that it plans to turn "Prius" into a division name (like "Scion" is a division name), and create several different versions within the Prius name. Perhaps, one will be based on the Yaris, one one the Matrix, and one on the Corolla. Who knows.

    Yes I would like a Prius with a 1.1 liter that gets 80mpg, but there is a small part of me that also can't wait until some form of alternative energy car can do a 0-60 in 5.0 seconds. (Yes, I am aware of the Tesla, but I'm thinking of something more innovative, like a super fuel cell that can release a huge amount of KW power, yet still provide fuel for 500+ miles)

    I think the single most important thing that Americans can do to improve national fuel economy though is to get SUVs off of the road !!!
     
  4. a priori

    a priori Canonus Curiosus

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    I suppose this is well-known among many on PC, but I am not aware of it. Do you have any reference for the lawsuit or any write-up on this settlement?

    I had thought the battery size was all part of the hybrid design, and I think the weight/output of the battery was pretty well-engineered to accomplish the task of producing high MPGs on a car that can be used without distance or speed restrictions.

    Does anyone else know if this is true?

    I thought I had heard the Lithium ion battery patent (for one particular type of Lion battery) was owned by another manufacturer who had agreed to produce exclusively for GM. I have no evidence of this -- it only comes from a suspect memory.
     
  5. JSH

    JSH Senior Member

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    Cobasys - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Short Version:
    Cobasys is a joint venture between Chevron and Ovonic battery company. GM used to own the share that is currently owned by Chevron but sold it after the CARB EV mandate was repealed.

    Cobasys won a lawsuit against Panasonic that limits the size of NiMH batteries that can be used in the US in vehicle applications until 2010. Panasonic is Toyota's supplier for NiMH batteries used in their hybrid vehicles.
     
  6. a priori

    a priori Canonus Curiosus

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    jhinton -

    Thank you for the useful link and information.
     
  7. finman

    finman Senior Member

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    More of the sad battery truth attached. why isn't THIS bigger news? Hmmmm...

    Also attached how GM effectively killed off mass electric transport as well.

    Sheesh, and people believe GM has our interests at heart and it'll be bad if they go (are going) bankrupt?

    Strange world we live in.

    PS For some reason the .pdf isn't working, so i tried a text version and a link:
    History Detectives . Investigations - Electric Street Car | PBS
     

    Attached Files:

  8. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    so I suppose the Gen 2 was a sellout too?

    It was bigger and faster than the Gen 1 and only gave us an "incremental change" [in mpg].
     
  9. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    The reason the Tesla has a few thousand laptop batteries has nothing to do with patents or limits on the size of batteries. Tesla (following in the footsteps of AC Propulsion, and using some technology licensed from ACP) chose this battery configuration to keep cost down: Laptop batteries are produced by the hundreds of millions (or perhaps by the billions) and are available as a commodity at reasonable cost. It was the cheapest way to pack enough punch.

    In addition Altairnano's battery was not yet available when the Tesla was being designed. LiFePO4 is more stable than Li-Ion and therefore safer, but costs more and has a lower energy density. But it does not require liquid cooling as in the Tesla.

    Newer EV projects are turning to LiFePO4. But it would have been a commercial and public relations disaster for Tesla to postpone the Roadster.
     
  10. bob2780

    bob2780 Junior Member

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    Hi Everyone
    Thanks to everyone who commented and expanded on it and picked up the ball I dropped on the thread
    Thanks Daniel for straightening me out on the lion technology

    To Tidelandprius No I don’t believe that Gen 1or Gen 2 are sellouts because of where the design revolution was when they were created, they were and probably still are ahead of the curve even with the NIMH size restrictions placed on it by Cobasys mandate

    My comment about Incremental change was hoping that Gen 3 would have and should have an EV range of the 1996 Rav4EV technology phev80 instead of PHEV 40 with an MPG at least 80 the Prius is a Great car if we keep ourselves and the general public ahead of what is available hopefully support it and demand it maybe Toyota or someone else can get us out of this energy economical mess
    Thanks again all I hope I Did not offend anyone

    BOB2780
     
  11. a priori

    a priori Canonus Curiosus

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    Offend? No -- thanks for bringing this up. I learned a good deal more and have enjoyed the thread.
     
  12. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    While I do agree Toyota has the opportunity with the launch of the new model to push the envelope, I also feel that I want a product that's solid and reliable rather than have something rushed (look what happened to the Camry's 6-spd transmission).
     
  13. bruceha_2000

    bruceha_2000 Senior Member

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    They had the opportunity but instead put out the Hybrid Camry which is almost the same size and gets 25% WORSE MPG (or if you switch it, the Prius gets 33% BETTER MPG) because they put in a 'too big' engine, bowing to the "MORE POWER" crowd.
     
  14. bruceha_2000

    bruceha_2000 Senior Member

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    Bull. Go to Europe and look at the cars. A Prius is pretty darned BIG compared to most of the cars you'll see. The "I need MORE power, I need BIG" is much more a U.S. mentality. Maybe it would be that was in Europe too, if they hadn't been paying twice as much for fuel as we pay for YEARS. Sure there are a relatively few larger cars because there are people with money to burn all over the world, but the majority have learned they can easily live with less.
     
  15. PriusSport

    PriusSport senior member

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    Well, if they can get better mileage out of a bigger Prius, they can get even better mileage without changing the Prius' size.

    The trouble with car companies is a successful new model often gets worse when the marketing people get a hold of it.
     
  16. bruceha_2000

    bruceha_2000 Senior Member

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    Seems unlikely since the Hybrid Camry has 187 total HP and also has the "not recommended" towing 'restriction'
     
  17. robbyr2

    robbyr2 New Member

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    I don't think I'm the only one that thinks it doesn't need to be any larger or faster, and the "better" fuel mileage just matches what I'm getting (and I'm told it will improve after 5K miles or so). I'm not angry about missing out on something as is implied.

    I do think we all need to consider product cycles- the 2010 Prius was conceived no later than 2 years ago when gas was $2.50 a gallon. Toyota was simply wrong in thinking that size and power were something they needed to worry more about than $4, $5 or $8 a gallon gasoline.
     
  18. bruceha_2000

    bruceha_2000 Senior Member

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    What happens when $4 gas is "the good old days" and Toyota could have said "We have a Prius the size of the 2004-2009 MY that gets 70 MPG" instead of "We have this slightly larger one with a lot more HP that gets 50 MPG".

    Maybe the 'entire car buying population' doesn't have enough information to make a "I need larger, more power" decision. :) No one has said what the MPG of the next Prius iteration (presuming not PHEV) would be if Toyota DIDN'T shove the HP to 160. For a lot of "this year's" U.S. Prius buyers, the cost/performance/size calculation didn't sway them until gas headed north of $3 in a hurry. One could actually find one on the lot to test drive a year ago. Not now. 'Bigger/faster' isn't so high on the list anymore.
     
  19. Dave_PH

    Dave_PH New Member

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    A little more power would be nice. Better handling is essential as is improvement in options choices and better build quality. I'm not an aescetic, there's no reason I have to suffer for fuel economy. They should throw in a sun roof(not open all the time) and better seats. The majority of American buyers would prefer that to blue teeth.
     
  20. bac

    bac Active Member

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    Who has a sunroof that is open all the time? :D

    ... Brad