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Which uses more battery power, AC or heater/defroster?

Discussion in 'Prius c Main Forum' started by DickPhillips, Dec 24, 2014.

  1. DickPhillips

    DickPhillips Member

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    Where I live we don't need or use AC very much but in the winter my wife likes to set the interior temp up to 72 degrees and we often need the defroster, especially on the windshield. I've wondered which uses more electric power from the battery to operate, AC or the heater/defroster? Also, does the AC come on automatically with the defroster, thus giving a double whammy to power use?
     
  2. CR94

    CR94 Senior Member

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    Air conditioning takes far more power than the heater. As long as the engine is already warmed up and running, heat is a free byproduct---although using the fan to distribute that heat consumes some power. I believe AC usually comes on automatically with the front defroster, depending on conditions.
     
  3. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    If you've got the mode set to heat/defog, it may be activating AC, if it behaves similar to the regular prius. This is even if the AC button is not depressed, and it's light off.

    I've been monitoring ours with a ScanGauge, sometimes AC runs, intermittently, sometimes not. The lower the ambient temp the less I see AC running. At 5C or lower I don't believe it ever runs.
     
  4. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    a/c is all electric. heat uses the engine, but will make it run more, so a little more gas. and mendel^^^ is the expert on a/c on even when the button isn't pushed and the light is not lit. in the end, it all comes from the gasoline, so don't worry about it too much.
     
  5. DickPhillips

    DickPhillips Member

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    Thank you all. I thought the heat was also provided electrically, but this you've told me would explain why it takes a few minutes before there is any warmth to the air flow, even from the defroster, which will start pushing air right away. I knew Prius' (both from my C and my previous 2010 III) paid a mileage penalty in the winter when we in the NW are using heater/defroster but thought it was mainly to run the generator to build up the battery which was being used to provide heat.
     
  6. Quinlan00

    Quinlan00 Junior Member

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    I agree with bisco, the AC probably uses more battery power but running the heat will have more impact on your MPGs overall.
     
  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    electric heat is a huge drain, even the pip doesn't have it. i think leaf and volt do, but most use it judiciously.
     
  8. mahout

    mahout Active Member

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    typically, A/C uses a lot more energy because it doesn't get free heat as with the heater. When defrosting the A/C dehumidifies much better, especially on recirculatiom, the worse as outside temp climbs. Now if its an electric and not hybrid its a toss up and depends on the temperature difference between outsude and inside.
     
  9. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Using coolant temperature to heat the cabin isn't "free", it's cheap though. AC, regardless of the method, saps more power, cuts mpg more.
     
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  10. mmmodem

    mmmodem Senior Taste Tester

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    Heat can be run for free. Turn temps up, open vents, and turn off HVAC. If you travel 45 mph and higher you will feel warm air coming in. For an added bonus, set direction of air to feet and windshield. If you don't breathe much, carry passengers, or its not raining, this setup will keep the cabin warm and windows clear. This is how I setup in the winter to minimize drain on heat and AC. If the windows do fog, I turn the fan on a few seconds to clear and turn it off again.
     
    #10 mmmodem, Dec 26, 2014
    Last edited: Dec 26, 2014
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  11. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    I recall someone mentioned here a long time ago that the rear defroster uses the most electricity (just edging out low beam headlights)
     
  12. Ashlem

    Ashlem Senior Member

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    That would make sense, considering how big of an area the defroster has to heat up, and in the c4 trim, also heating up the side mirrors.

    On a related note, I was quite surprised only the 4 trim had heated side mirrors. Heated seats I can understand due to cost, but I can't imagine wiring for the side mirrors would cost that much more to not make it available on the lower trims.

    Regarding the fogging in your vehicle, is your air set on recirculate? I only had the fogging problem during winter in my c, and later my liftback, if I had the air on recirculate without the a/c on. If I had it set to have airflow from outside, the fogging issue never came up unless I set the blower really low and jumped in the car right after taking a shower without drying my hair first.

    If you need to clear the fog out quickly, open all your windows slightly while driving for about thirty seconds or so. If you don't want too much cold, open a front window and the opposite rear window, such as the driver side front and passenger rear windows instead. This should help clear the moisture out of the air in your cabin faster than blasting the a/c and heat.
     
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  13. KYBlue

    KYBlue Active Member

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    Mendel - recently saw a picture of the possibly cat or some section of the exhaust from the Prius C - it has two coolant line hookups as if it's using exhaust heat to provide cabin heat. Wouldn't that be completely free? It seems like robbing it from the exhaust would be the smart thing to do.

    C
     
  14. edteach

    edteach Junior Member

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    both the ac and heat run when you use defrost in the heat mode. It does it on all cars. Its the way it pulls the moisture out of the air. In Air defrost you run only the air, in heat both run
     
  15. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    There is no reason to differentiate electricity from petrol in a Prius 'c' -- the source energy is always petrol.
    This question is one huge ... it depends.

    A lot depends on how the systems are used,
    and a lot depends on the ambient relative humidity.

    'Defrost' mode is an energy sink.
     
  16. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    The coolant lines at the exhaust are absorbing heat just to heat the coolant, to get the car's engine warmed up faster. That said, it indirectly helps with warming the cabin.

    It's all a matter of degree (pun intended), the engine can have excessive heat, and instead of throwing it away via the radiator, using it to heat the cabin is very efficient.

    OTOH, the Prius spends a fair bit of time in EV only, especially at lower speeds. Then taking heat from the coolant to heat the cabin will have some impact. Again, not as bad as AC, in my experience.

    I've got a constant ScanGauge monitoring engine temp. The typical coolant peak temp, rarely seen, is around 90C. In around-town driving, it's more common to see the temp around 60~85C.
     
    #16 Mendel Leisk, Dec 29, 2014
    Last edited: Dec 29, 2014
  17. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Yup. I believe the engineer said it's 1 min faster to warm up the cabin at 0°C with the exhaust heat recovery system.
     
  18. hackenfort

    hackenfort Member

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    Upstate ny here -6 again today. IMO using the heat takes much more mpg away than the ac. This month I'm down to 38 mpg and the heater in the prius I only fair, it must run almost constant to keep the cabin warm, which means the engine is on most of the time


    If I use Eco mode mpg goes back up but heat isn't acceptable at these temps

    In the summer months using the a/c my mpg is always in the low 50s
    So I'm thinking heat is costing me more than a/c
     
  19. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    agreed. you're basically driving a gasser at those temps. albeit a frugal one.;)
     
  20. GregP507

    GregP507 Senior Member

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    A gasoline-powered heater would be the logical answer; Volkswagen has used them safely for years, but it would cause instant hysteria among the risk-averse types who seem to have invaded our society.