2012 Toyota Prius Plug-In: By The Numbers, Would It Work For You?

Discussion in 'Gen 1 Prius Plug-in 2012-2015' started by krelborne, Mar 24, 2011.

  1. Satch

    Satch Junior Member

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    Right, just as you said. I just want to keep the calculation simple, so the spreadsheet subtracts 13 from the daily milage, then multiplies that difference by the price per gallon ($4) and divides that product by miles per gallon (48). Clearly, this is not that precise, but close enough for government work.

    OK, guilty as charged, I work for the government.


     
  2. Paradox

    Paradox Prius Enthusiast / Moderator
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    When I am on my computer I can provide links, but in the thread I started when I had a demo phv for a week, I thought I posted my mileage on a trip from NYC to Lancaster pa and back in one day. I forget the actual numbers now, but we had 5 people in the car both ways and coming home the trunk was packed full. Only charging an hour or so while up there, we still got something like 52 to 54 mpg overall. Like I said I forget the actual numbers off hand but compared to my prius v on the same trip which I have done many times, the plug in performed much better. And it did better than my dads prius III as well, so until I have one next year and can learn after ownership, I say the plug in did very well in cs mode considering something like a 400+ mile trip with the car weighted down a lot...
     
  3. mlg779

    mlg779 Junior Member

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    If you live in the mountains could you use the batteries uphill, and down hill recharge them? and extend electrical range?
     
  4. Danny

    Danny Admin/Founder
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    I know I'm late to this thread, but Bengt using this screen to gauge his EV usage is wrong, I believe.

    [​IMG]

    I'm pretty sure this counts mileage for the total trip (like Trip A or Trip B), not just EV miles. My reading of this gauge tells me that 55% of his 77.7 miles was in EV. I'd love for any other PCer who has had the chance to spend time in the Plug-in to let me know if I'm right or not.

    I averaged 70 MPG over a 64 mile all-highway trip. That was 95% over the speed of 65 MPH.
     
  5. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    A year ago, I sat down with an engineering colleague and we ran the numbers on Prius vs Camry. The Camry won, until I asked, "What if gas goes up to $4/gallon?" Prius won.

    My wife had a friend who was a financial wizard for an investment bank. Years ago, he created a spreadsheet to compare every aspect of cars -- total cost of ownership. He concluded that Saturn was the best choice, then he went out and bought a BMW. Why? Because that's exactly how people buy cars. Emotions make the decisions, not spreadsheets.
     
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  6. drash

    drash Senior Member

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    Guilty. Bought the Prius based on it tweaking my nerd gland. Probably why I'll buy the Prius PHV. And that being said it was its internal beauty that attracted me. Dual propulsion systems and advanced tech, at the time one of kind, just hooked me.
     
  7. krelborne

    krelborne New Member

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    Well, I bet a financial wizard for an investment bank doesn't have to worry too much about how much his car is costing him. ;)

    It's good to know the TCO numbers so you know how much the car is REALLY costing you, especially over the long term. If you've narrowed the field, TCO can nudge you in a particular direction. The price of fuel is a huge variable, though. For example, the Prius saves somewhere around 2000 gallons of fuel over a Camry over 200,000 miles. At $1/gallon, you can't make up the price difference between the cars. $3 or $4 is an entirely different matter, as you apparently found out.
     
  8. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    I get more like 3600 gallons less on the Prius.
     
  9. inventor00

    inventor00 Active Member

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    Don't forget there MAY be some tax credits in the Federal and (Big maybe) California (if any left) which will help tip it in less expensive then a regular Prius AND it gets a Carpool sticker- what is your time worth in the CA traffic?
     
  10. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    $4/gallon? Surely by the time you pay off the five year car loan, we will pay more than $5/gallon for gas.
     
  11. Dolce_Vita

    Dolce_Vita Member

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    The PHV would definitely work for me, infact it would be ideal. My daily commute is about a 8km/5mile round trip, and the vast majority of my other weekend trips and places i drive to is within about 12 miles from my house. These short trips are a burden to my economy due to the amount of warm up cycles i do, so a PHV would be great for me!
     
  12. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    But do you drive enough miles/year to make it relevant paying for the higher up front cost?
    Impossible. It's inconceivable that the plug in will be cheaper. People will be willing to pay more and will do so. Even if MSRP was $5k higher and tax credits were $7500 dealers would just sell at $8k over MSRP.
     
  13. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    Exactly right, IF the dealers are free to set pricing. There have been occasions in the past when Toyota set the pricing for early adopters.
     
  14. Sergiospl

    Sergiospl Senior Member

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    This is perfect for my situation. My work is 6.1 miles from home and just about any other locations for the usual weekly errands (Post office, Bank, Supermarket, etc..) is in between.

    I will attempt to use one tank of gas(10.6 gallons) every quarter(90 days) for a total 4 tanks for the year. Otherwise, I am only looking to use gas for occasional out of town trips.
     
  15. krelborne

    krelborne New Member

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    That's the other big variable: fuel economy assumptions. ;) I ran the highway numbers to be generous.
     
  16. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    The average American drives 13,500 miles/year, but many drive a lot more, while others drive a lot less.

    Imagine what your mileage would be if you typically drive 7,500 miles/year (as many do). Twenty miles a day! It would take you a week to use a single gallon of gas. You would fill your gas tank every two months.
     
  17. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    Somebody driving so little would be hard pressed to get benefit from a regular Prius in the first place, since it does carry a hybrid premium that only pays for itself under moderate to heavy use.
     
  18. gwmort

    gwmort Active Member

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    You'll get better mileage if you buy a half tank every month instead to avoid carrying around extra gasoline weight.
     
  19. cyclopathic

    cyclopathic Senior Member

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    IMHO high MPG car does not make any economic sense for people with low annual miles. You have to be driving 2x of national avg for it to start making sense. And to be in 2x group you have to be driving 50-100mi a day; not exactly target Plug-in buyer.

    if Plug-in does not improve non-electric MPG by re-capturing more regenerative braking and optimized firmware, it would not economically appeal to to 2x group. Sentimental value is different matter.
     
  20. billnchristy

    billnchristy Active Member

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    Here we go with the making sense again. Here is a little quiz:

    Person A has 30k to spend on a vehicle, regardless of person A's driving habits or preference towards automobilia, what is the most rational choice:

    A) A 15mpg SUV
    B) A 25mpg low end luxury sedan
    C) A 45mpg hybrid
    D) A 55mpg+ 13mi EV range plug in hybrid

    Everyone seems to fail to realize that people generally buy at or slightly above their monetary limits (either budget or actual financial limit) when they buy a car.

    Is a 15k Fiesta that gets 35mpg a more economical buy than a 25k Prius? YES...would most 15k Fiesta buyers even consider a car 10k more than what they are looking at? NO.

    If you handed me 30k and said pick a car, any car within that price I would pick the most economical one...the money is spent when you buy a car, the only thing you control is how much you dump into the gas tank be it a Ferrari, Lexus, Toyota, Ford or Kia.