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| This is a discussion on New Article: The True Cost of owning a Hybrid within the Gen II Prius Main Forum forums, part of the Gen II (2004-2009) Toyota Prius Forums category; Nobody said computer systems were dead accurate. They simple have a set number of equations to work with to calculate ... |
New Article: The True Cost of owning a Hybrid
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| | #11 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: hell
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Friends: 5 | Nobody said computer systems were dead accurate. They simple have a set number of equations to work with to calculate these things. They are all off by a certain percentage. |
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| | #12 |
| Cat Lovers Against the Bomb Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: Spokane, WA
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Friends: 0 | They left out an important cost-savings item, perhaps because it applies only to the Prius, and not to the Hondas: The Prius has no transmission and no clutch. Those are major repair items in old-fashioned cars. The PSD is constructed like a differential, and should be as reliable. And there is nothing in the way of a clutch. Never having to repair or replace these should be included in the long-term costs of ownership. |
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| | #13 |
| Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: NorthEast USA
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Friends: 0 | Plus, the "transmission" (for lack of a better term) is part of the hybrid technology. Thus it qualifies for the extra hybrid warranty to 8 years/100,000 miles. |
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| | #14 |
| Join Date: Sep 2004 Location: Columbus, OH, USA
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Friends: 0 | I found the article missing one aspect about "true cost" that I find missing from any discussion or article that I have read anywhere (although I'll admit I dont spend hours reading forums here or in car mags etc). *** Emissions/pollution costs *** What is the "true cost" of emissions, or more accurately, what is the true SAVINGS due to the LOWER level of emissions that a hybrid produces? I scoured the US government websites fairly thoroughly for such a cost/savings estimate and found one research article that attempted to delve into this, but it got very complicated very fast and did not "roll up" the details into a simple-to-understand number that people could easily relate to. *IF* the cost/savings of pollution could be described in terms readily understandable by Joe/Joan Q. Public, I expect there would be an even stronger move to/demand for hybrids. Isnt the pollution/emissions of a Prius about 10% of that of a non-hybrid similar-sized car? My spouse and I each own a Prius and the bigger factor (than fuel savings) for us was the pollution/emissions savings, not the mileage savings which one can obtain in a small number of non-hybrid vehicles for a lot less money. Fuel savings are often cited instead of emission/pollution savings even though (as I understand it) the emission/pollution reduction expressed as a percentage of a non-hybrid's pollution is much greater than the fuel savings percentage. If anyone knows of research that attempts to "simply" quantify the cost/savings of emissions of automobiles (or of a "ton" of emissions, the metric used at www.fueleconomy.gov), I'd like to know.
__________________ [font=Comic Sans MS:8eb87e492a] [/font:8eb87e492a]Silver BI Ohio 3-11-04 44.0 mpg for 1st 12 months. |
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| | #15 |
| Cat Lovers Against the Bomb Join Date: Feb 2004 Location: Spokane, WA
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Friends: 0 | fyaeger: I agree with you completely (as will most, if not all, here at PC). However, the American frontier/individualist mentality is only concerned with direct costs to the individual. Collectively, pollution costs us all. But if I cut my own personal pollution by 90%, it does not actually save me, personally, any money. I pay at the pump for my gas. I do not pay directly for my own pollution. And that's all the mainstream analysts care about. One thing about us tree-huggers: we do care about the economic and health effects of pollution. And when people find out that you care about that also, you'll be branded by the SUV crowd as a tree-hugger, and by extension a godless anti-American commie pinko.
__________________ Daniel Primary car: 100% Electric 2003 Porsche 911 Carrera. Estimated range at 55 mph: 81 miles total or 64 miles to 80% discharge. Top speed 70 mph. Secondary car: Zap Xebra SD, also 100% electric. 1.9 cents per mile. Range: 40 miles total, or 32 miles to 80% discharge. Top speed 35 mph. Faster downhill. Both EVs use electrons generated from water power. Gas guzzler for when I have to travel farther than 60 miles: 2004 Prius. "If voting changed anything, they'd make it illegal." -- Emma Goldman "Anyone who has ever looked into the glazed eyes of a soldier dying on the battlefield will think long and hard before starting a war." -- Otto von Bismarck |
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| | #16 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: South Burlington, VT
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Friends: 1 | Quote:
Now, that isn't to say that whowever bought the cars used might not have had to do transmission work however many more miles down the road. My point, is that for most people, transmission work is probably not an issue on cars they buy new since most don't drive them beyond the initial lifespan of the tranny.
__________________ Bruce Mine: Driftwood '04 BC 24 Sept 2004 - added: mudflaps, door edge guards, side panel moldings, Coastal Tech EV switch, OEM Integrity tires, WeatherTech window deflectors. Last tank - 14 Jul '09: 728.9 miles - MFD MPG: 56.0 Actuals Lifetime: 93,087.3 miles, 48.90 MPG. Wife's: Barcelona '06 #7 May 2006 - added: front mudflaps, Coastal Tech EV switch. OEM Integrity tires. Last tank - 21 May '09: 419.4 miles - MFD MPG: 46.7 Actuals Lifetime: 31571.4 miles, 44.82 MPG. | |
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| | #17 |
| Join Date: Jun 2004
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Friends: 0 | Clothes washer died last year. Choice of top loader at CDN$600 or front loader at CDN$1,000. Difference in electricity usage was 600kwh for the top and 186kwh for the front. Front also uses less water, less detergent and spins faster thereby clothes dry faster in the drier (when one doesn't hang them outside or inside to dry - weather dependent Put in a fish pond. Choice of in-pond pump or out-of-ground pump. Out of ground more expensive, harder to install but uses less electricity and is repairable. In-pond pump dies and it goes to the land-fill. New fridge coming up soon. Determining factor will be "How Energy Star efficient is it?" At some point in time, in every factor of our lives we will have to make choices for the future. The Prius is the future. We are all beta testers. |
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| | #18 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: hell
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Friends: 5 | DuncanNixon2004 Do you mind if i print that? at first i was a little lost.. but i like the whole point. I think it breaks things down a little easier for some people. |
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| | #19 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: Silicon Valley, CA
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Friends: 0 | Quote:
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| | #20 | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2004 Location: Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Friends: 0 | <div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(bruceha_2000\";p=\"53491)</div> Quote:
My experience with Toyotas is that I would not expect any major component to fail within the first 100 kmiles. On my 1985 Camry, the original transmission failed at 168 Kmiles (and the replacement at 250 Kmiles); on my 1994 Camry, the original transmission failed at about 205 Kmiles. So I'll be watching carefully, optimistic that the Power Split Device is more durable than conventional transmissions. (After I eventually give up on the '94, now at 243 kilomiles ...) | |
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