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Does anybody else think the PiP is overpriced ???

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Main Forum' started by revhigh, Mar 7, 2012.

  1. ksstathead

    ksstathead Active Member

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    One tweak for those looking at financial payback: The miles replaced by the EV for folks like me with short commute and lots of short trips are horrible for ICE FE due to multiple warm up cycles each day. When I get my PiP in 2013, we'll be pretty much EV for local, and ~60 mpg on freeway (what we get now from 2010).

    Another tweak: You should compare MSRP to MSRP and account for all the heated seats etc differences between car a and car b to find the pricing of the EV features. It is bundling that is making the difference so large in these early stages. Any discount you got off MSRP is equally available on the PiP once initial demand is met. There were folks paying MSRP for Prius Two the same day you drove a harder bargain.
     
  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    can you give us your calculations showing how your prius is paying you back? many prius haters have come here telling us how it doesn't.
     
  3. AZGeek

    AZGeek Semi-informed Member

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    My 2 cents, with the caveat that I haven't bothered to read through every single paragraph quoted post:

    1) I think question should have been posted in the PiP sub-forum. Why pose this question in a non-PiP forum???
    2) Aside from a collectable, a car is an expense and not an investment. Sure, there are elements of green(er) cars that reduce that expense and cost of ownership, but very few will ever reap a positive savings over the capital outlay. The best one can hope to do is try to get a low total cost of ownership. The biggest factors there are a) going with a reliable brand, b) going for a fuel efficient model, and c) holding on to the vehicle for longer periods of time.
    3) Discussions of finances all come down to the individual. If you can justify the expense then go for it. If you can't then don't bash others who can.

    Mod, please move this thread to the proper sub-forum.
     
  4. drinnovation

    drinnovation EREV for EVER!

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    What is the basis for that claim of more efficient than the EV1? Only posts I've so far have had speeds too low to be a meaningful comparison.
    Lowest speed/power I recall from the EV1 was

    Efficiency: 115 Wh/mil @ 45mph.

    (other specs at
    http://avt.inel.gov/pdf/fsev/eva/genmot.pdf
    )
     
  5. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    $21k for a Prius?!! That's one heck of a bargain. I think you should send all of us Gen-1 and Gen-II pioneers on Prius Chat $5 for lowering the price for you. I paid like $24K in 2006 with some crazy non-rebate that got stolen away after taxes.

    I guess you'll be waiting another 10 years to buy a plug-in when it comes down to $25k. Me too.
     
  6. Much More Better

    Much More Better Active Member

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    Most people feel that there is little value to being efficient other than being financially rewarding. They think, if it doesn't pay to be efficient, then why do it?

    There are unique aspects of a Prius that you don't find on other cars, but the problem is, most people don't find those traits desirable. Silence, cleaner emissions, and using less oil......those traits are simply too abstract for people. They can't feel, see, or touch it. The only one that means anything is price at the pump. So when you crunch numbers and if you discover that it no longer pays to save gas, then there is no point to a Prius.

    I have alway known cars like the Civic Hybrid, Hy-Cam, Highlander Hybrid would never sell in real numbers because it's too easy to reduce the purpose of saving gas to saving money. The only difference is the HSD so people can directly compare two versions, and figure out payback, and discover it doesn't work. Now people are doing the same thing with liftback vs PiP because it's so similar. Too few people feel strongly about the other benefits of hybrids to pay for it.

    I like the PiP but I'll wait for the next-gen.
     
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  7. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    My arithmetic says different.

    Compare a 50 mpg hybrid Prius 'c' to a 37.5 mpg car like the Yaris, both with similar trims and features. Over 250k miles the Yaris consumes 1666 gallons more fuel. At $3.75/gallon savings are $6247

    While many people will say they do not keep the car for 250k miles, they still benefit because the depreciation is lower.
     
  8. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    so what are the msrp's of similarly equipped cars? i only drive 6,000 miles a year, is it still worth it for me?
     
  9. revhigh

    revhigh MPG Enthusiast

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    Yup. I sure can .... and here it is.

    I had a 2008 RAV4 that got 20 MPG. It was worth $16,000. I drive 25,000 miles per year. In the RAV4 that's 1250 gallons of fuel. For argument's sake and to use round numbers ... assume $4 per gallon ... or $5000 per year in fuel costs.

    Now the Prius .... 25,000 miles per year @ 50 mpg uses 500 gallons of fuel .... or $2000 worth. The Prius cost me $21K in Jan of 2010 after $1500 rebate and $1500 discount. That was a $5000 difference between the RAV4 and the Prius. $5000 divided by $3000 difference in fuel usage yields a 1.66 year period to recoup the additional investment. After 1.66 years, the Prius essentially PAYS me $3000 per year in fuel savings. After 1.66 years these are REAL SAVINGS. It's fuel that I DIDN"T HAVE TO BUY. How can some here consider that NOT to be savings ?

    If you extrapolate further ... you can see that the Prius .... at $16,000 residual after the 1.66 years of original investment recoup, can pay itself off in just over 5 years ... right down to zero. So the choice is ... Keep the $16,000 RAV4 and spend $35,000 for fuel in 7 years .... or spend $5K more on the Prius NOW for a total of $21K, and spend $14,000 on fuel in 7 years.

    These numbers don't work at all for the PiP. Well ... they do if you consider 40 or 50 years to be a valid period to recoup the added investment.

    If you want to consider all kinds of green stuff to justify what is numerically a financially unsound purchase ... that is completely up to you ... it's YOUR money ... do what you want with it ... it has NOTHING to do with being able to afford anything. I bought the Prius purely to save fuel and reduce the amount of money that I pay those scum in the middle east, which contributes to all kinds of other good green stuff incidentally. That's good enough for me. These electric cars simply aren't ready yet.


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  10. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    REV- were those rebates dealer incentives or are there still some hybrid tax credits out there?
     
  11. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    The Prius PHV owner miles were driven in the real-world during the rush hour commute. So, that 45 mph constant speed figure is not comparable.

    The number that I was comparing to used Pomona Loop test cycle which better reflects the rush hour commute.

    EV1 urban loop1 with minimum payload is 296 Wh/mi (see page 2). Freeway loop with minimum payload is 223 Wh/mi (page 4).

    We have seen Prius PHV owners getting 234 Wh/mi and 219 Wh/mi. They got 55 to 57 MPG for the miles driven with gasoline, which I think even more amazing. One owner's (Tracksyde) prior Gen II Prius got about 46 MPG in the same commute which is spot on with the EPA figure, as for reference.
     
  12. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Ok, so you gave up a big chunk of steel and downsized. That saved you money especially when the dealers were giving big discounted due to the SUA media craze.

    Are you trying to compare that with upgrading your 2010 Prius to Prius PHV?

    First, you will not downsizing this time. Second, the gas price is almost $4 per gallon so fuel efficient cars are in high demand = no discount. Third, you already have the most fuel efficient midsize car without a plug. So, no, you will not be able to save the same amount as the last time.
     
  13. revhigh

    revhigh MPG Enthusiast

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    Toyota rebate and dealer discount ... for a total of a little over $3K off the sticker of just over $24K, yielding a $21K price ....

    REV
     
  14. revhigh

    revhigh MPG Enthusiast

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    My numbers are real.

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  15. bedrock8x

    bedrock8x Senior Member

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    The no-plug Prius has no EV mile to count, it is a foul.

    Just to be fair, just compare the PiP with the VOLT since both have ICE ( one poster's response want to count the cost without the ICE, unfortunately you cannot buy both without the ICE, you must use the purchasing price).

    VOLT: $42K/40 = $1050 /EV mile
    PiP $32K/14 = $2285 / EV mile

    PiP is still OVER priced.


     
  16. fotomoto

    fotomoto Senior Member

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    The Rav4 only weighs 195 pounds more than the PIP.
     
  17. revhigh

    revhigh MPG Enthusiast

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    LOL ...maybe not. :D

    I am not dissing the PiP, I'm just commenting that at the numbers that we're talking ... it's not financially feasable. If it was $25K ... I might try to make it work for me, but at $32K, even WITH the $2500 tax incentive ... the numbers just don't cut it FOR ME.

    As I said ... if all the moons and stars align for you in terms of driving, weather, terrain, and lifestyle conditions, I have no doubt that you could drive it without using hardly ANY gasoline.

    For me though ... a $10K premium over what I can get a new II for RIGHT NOW .... TODAY ... just don't add up. I'm not paying $10K for a 12 mile battery pack in what is essentially the exact same car that I have now.

    REV
     
  18. revhigh

    revhigh MPG Enthusiast

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    That's about what I would have guessed without looking it up, and I posted that exact comment in my post above. Thanks for checking !


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  19. Gurple42

    Gurple42 New Member

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    I paid 21.1 for my 2011 Prius 2, I bought it in March of 11, that was pretty much the standard price in Southern Cal. at that time. Toyota has since raised the msrp of the vehicle (2011) by $500. I read of a few who paid even less. So the price paid for op's Prius was on the low end of the norm at that time.
    I for one, am grateful to the early adapters who are buying the Prius plug in. They are the pioneers for all of us trying to use less gas. While the plug in does not make economic sense when compared to the pkg 2, it is paving the way to the future and those early adapters are paying for it, thank you.:cheer2:
     
  20. revhigh

    revhigh MPG Enthusiast

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    Totally agreed. If the car was $6K less as it is now with 12 miles of EV, or it gave you 50-60 miles of EV priced where it is now ... I'd be all over it. :D


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