well they accelarate a damn site quicker than that and will easily do 45 mpg but average of 50-50 ok maybe about the same but i know which i would rather get
Solar have you got any figures about price that you pay for electricity after installing the plug-in kit you were talking about a few pages back? I am just curious, having watched the conspiracy theory :Kick_Can_ documentary about ev-1, checking development progress of tesla roadster and so on, there are figures about energy efficiency, but they dont tell me much.
I wonder if you picked up any numbers about electricity bills reading prius forums
886km driven, added 41,8 liters (which is low and I even overpumped)
Own calculation: 4.717 l/100km (Prius meter showed 4.6 l/100km but had been on 4.7 for a while because... well see below...).
I got a rear tyre puncture (air pressure falling below 1 bar). I went to the garage, they took the wheel off, found a nail, pulled the nail out, and injected some 'vulcanizing' liquid in the hole made by the nail, and put the wheel back on. 10 minutes; 10 euros; I was impressed.
Solar Hydro
P.S. I passed 30.000km on the Prius counter this evening.
thing you gotta wonder now, was did you drive over the nail, or did someone hammer it in?
Have you upset any psychopaths lately Solar, apart from me I mean?
Own calculation: 4.897 l/100km (Prius meter showed 4.8 l/100km).
36th refuel on the Prius
888km driven, added 42,0 liters
Own calculation: 4.729 l/100km (Prius meter showed 4.6 l/100km).
***
I also went for my second liftetime maintenance (the rule is once a year or every 15000km, which in my case yields nearly the same date, although I'm considering taking measures that would cause me to drive far less).
Again, I paid NOTHING for maintenance, whilst it's clear that they did the oil/filter work, rotated the tyres, put in windshield wiper fluid, painted over some scratches on the side that my dad had made, and whatever else they do at an annual maintenance.
I also asked the garage to fix the small star/crack in my windshield from the day a rock hit it; it's improved, but not a full repair. I'll have a look at my insurance policy to see if I can get a new windshield.
Own calculation: 4.878 l/100km (Prius meter showed 4.6 l/100km, was on 4.5 earlier in the day)
On Tuesday, I drove 450km, fuel consumption was strangely contrasted. 4.4/4.5l/100km on the way out in the afternoon going to Amsterdam via Rotterdam. 5.7l/100km on the way back from Amsterdam via Utrecht. TomTom6 on my new phone told me to drive via Rotterdam on the way out and via Utrecht on the way back. I complied; maybe I won't in the future...
Screenshot (taken with phone) upon arrival in Amsterdam, note the number of km traveled on the fuel tank; this is to emphasize that it's over much of a tank, not a tricked snapshot.
Also just wondered if your car us typically the same weight for most of your journey's Solar? Taking a big group of American's to lunch will certainly weigh the car down enough to affect the ratio.
Sorry for being an ass, but.. I don't see the point of the Prius.
My dad's 8 year old Citroen Saxo Diesel averages 4.2l/100kms - and this over the last year.
My previous car (Peugeot 206 1.4Hdi) did a whopping 3.9l/100kms - when I was really paying attention (unfortunatly, the way I usually drive, it was more close to 5l/100 - but thats really pushing all the 75hp out of the engine at all times )
Yes, and my bicycle 'eats' 2 donuts / 100 km... I think these cars are a class smaller than the Prius, but maybe I am wrong, I really don't know the Prius size in life.
Doesn't the energy needed to make and destroy the car, and the emissions making the materials used make the Prius a big joke? I think I read something to that effect in Professional Engineer a few months ago (but it might have been a different publication).
I don't see the point really. It's certainly no better for the environment than a normal car once you take everything into account.
Unless the engineering process and destruction process for the Prius is majorly different to that of a "normal" car, then the fact the the Prius gives out a fraction of the emmisions of the "normal" car, then it must gain something. Even though in the bigger picture this is not as much as if you just take the emissions of the car running into account.
Plus, how do we know that something else the Prius is doing (emmitting, causing, anything really) is not damaging something else that we have not measured or even know about yet. If we all moved NOW to a Prius, we may find that all those hybrid cars cause something else to break somewhere in the environment. (I don't know what, but you know what I mean).