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AC commits pre-meditated murder on MPG

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Fuel Economy' started by Skoorbmax, Jul 6, 2011.

  1. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    On short trips starting out with a car that's been sitting in the sun we often won't bother with Air Conditioning, regardless of conditions. It's the least efficient scenario: just shut everything off and roll the windows down ;)
     
  2. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    That makes sense but I can say that when AC is on bust and I'm at, say, a drive through, within about 2-3 minutes the battery can go from 2 bars short of full to only two short of the bottom; basically all the capacity exhausted from the battery. so, while its cabin air cooling it is not hot, the battery is under actual stress, whereas keeping the car "on" without AC the battery is hardly doing a thing.
     
  3. DumbMike

    DumbMike Active Member

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    I appreciate all of the numbers, computations, tips, etc. But I'm pushing retirement age and I'll take some comfort over a few MPGs. So, my A/C is set at the "cool me off, now" setting. Not in 2 minutes, not in 5 minutes, ... now. Except don't blow up my engine/battery (paid too much for that).

    Mike
     
  4. billnchristy

    billnchristy Active Member

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    You guys must run your AC balls out.

    I have sat in the car with the AC on idle for over 10 minutes and only dropped 2 bars on the battery and never had the engine come on.

    Thats at 72-73 with recirc and the fan on 3.
     
  5. jdcollins5

    jdcollins5 Senior Member

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    I agree. I run mine on Auto at 74. I am not giving up comfort for a few tenths mpg, either.

    I do like others, park with car facing the sun with a sunshade in the window, open the windows when first leaving the parking lot to cool down interior. By the time I hit the highway the cabin is almost cooled down and the fan and compressor are slowing back.

    I can see the battery amps dropping as the compressor and fan speed start dropping back. 5 minutes later I can start gaining back some of the mpg I lost from the parking lot to the highway. That is in 90F and 95% humidity.
     
  6. Michgal007

    Michgal007 Senior Member

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    I see a big increase in MPG when I turn off the A/C (~ 3-5 MPG).
     
  7. Insight-I Owner

    Insight-I Owner 2006 Insight-I MT + 2011 Prius

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    OK, I have some data that shows that moderate use of the AC does not impact mpg at all. I drive from my home in CT to Boston frequently, it's just under 140 miles. The last three trips have given HSI numbers of:
    72.5mpg - AC off, with the windows rolled up as I recall
    73.0mpg - AC off, windows cracked open I think
    69.5mpg - AC off, windows open several inches, slightly different route at the Boston end due to a stop for medical appointments, my GF came along on this trip

    The third was this past Tuesday. All three were in the same direction.

    I ran the usual route again today. It was a bit humid and 82F (CT) to 86F (Boston), no wind, so I decided to see what effect moderate use of AC would have. I set inside temp at 77F, recirculate (except for a brief period at the beginning when I didn't realize that changing another setting had switched it to external air intake), fan on AUTO, MODE upper vents only. I was very comfy thanks to the dehumidification effect of the AC.

    Today's result:

    72.7mpg

    I do realize that actual mpg's are 2-6% lower.
     
  8. lovemypriustoo

    lovemypriustoo Junior Member

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    I like it cool ... my temp is always set at 67 ... recirculation on ... fan at lowest speed. Plenty cool as it gets very hot and humid here in the summer. Last night I filled up and averaged 47.25 mpg for 200+ miles (hand calculated) vs. 50.1 mpg displayed. I will take 47.25 mpg any day which is far better than my 2007 Nissan Altima SL V6 which only got 17 mpg when running the a/c! :cheer2:
     
  9. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    I find this rather implausible. Even if used to a mild degree and not in place of open windows, which will increase drag, it does use electricity which must be replaced. I am positive that even though you've not identified a difference that if you truly had the exact same conditions (a trip even in the same direction can vary in how fast you drive and ambient temperatures) you would see one.

    City yeah that car isn't fantastic. We have a new V6 altima and in fact on a highway drive yesterday with AC on it got right at 30 mpg according to its computer (I've not tested much but think its computer is more accurate than the Prius; doesn't overestimate by ~5%)., which is a good bit above EPA. Around city it's low 20's, though :(
     
  10. flareak

    flareak Fleet Captain

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    Just curious if you'd try taking a video of this happening. I could try to do this and it would drop to pink.

    Perhaps my battery has less capacity since it is 6.5 years old.
     
  11. flareak

    flareak Fleet Captain

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    I just made a video. I can upload it tonight. Ran a timer, idle, 72 degrees with recirc and fan on 3.

    Engine came on when the battery was at 3 bars to recharge.

    Total time to pink was 6 minutes. Would have been less if the engine didn't recharge at 3 bars.

    If I had left the car on auto A/C it would have gone to MAX. Even after the 6 minutes of 72 degrees A/C. I tested for that too.
     
  12. direstraits71

    direstraits71 Member

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    Don't forget to compare results you must have the same weather outside including temperature, humidity, sun exposure and wind and the same set temperature on the AC. Otherwise your results will be incorrect.
     
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  13. flareak

    flareak Fleet Captain

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    Well, since it wasn't on auto and it was on manual and recirculate, we can probably neglect outside temperature, humidity, sun exposure, wind, etc.

    Temperature on A/C was 72. "3" on the fan. Idle, started from regular battery charge.
     
  14. billnchristy

    billnchristy Active Member

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    I've got the Fiesta today but if I think about it I will give it a try.

    10 minutes may have been an exaggeration, 6min isn't bad but you drained a lot. I may have had the perfect storm that day...it was the day they were announcing that the Atlanta Thrashers were folding so I left my office to listen on XM. I took a short loop trip around the block in hopes of hearing the announcement but they kept babbling so when I got back to work I just left it on and sat in the car.

    It was probably well topped off from the drive and that may have been the factor.

    I'm curious now to what reality would be so I will give it a shot for you.
     
  15. Skoorbmax

    Skoorbmax Senior Member

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    6 min is not bad. The other day when I said 2-3 minutes it literally was that. I was in a drive through and entered two bars shy of top and left with it at bottom and engine kicked in as I left. AC was on "low" with fan probably around 80% or so.
     
  16. Insight-I Owner

    Insight-I Owner 2006 Insight-I MT + 2011 Prius

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    It was surprising to me too, which is why I posted it. My speeds are very consistent (I've been doing this for a while!) but of course the temps, winds, etc DO vary. Yes I think AC DOES add an electrical load, the point I was making is that this load varies, and with light usage may be far less than 4-5mpg. Plus, at higher mpg's, the effects of small loads are more visible.
     
  17. sipnfuel

    sipnfuel New Member

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    The A/C when running at the lowest load draws about 2.5 amps from the battery. This is about 500 watts.

    I have seen it draw 4 - 5 amps. This is about 1000 watts. It probably draws way more than this because I have ECO mode on, and the fan is never at a high setting, and I run the A/C at a reasonable temp (never LOW).

    The A/C does seem to draw amps from the battery during cruise, though when the battery is being charged it will take it from the inverter.

    I postulate that the MG1/MG2 DC/DC conversion is most of the time incompatible with the AC inverter input voltage.
     
  18. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    Translation for dummies ?

    In the meantime, I'll just add a couple of "probably right, based on general principles:"

    1. The AC compressor is ~ 30% efficient, so if there is X amount of heat and humidity in the cabin to get rid off, it is going to take ~ 3 - 4X the energy to get the job done.

    2. Energy not spent on (1) is energy spent on MPG.

    3. High MPG cars show a greater drop in absolute MPG using AC than low MPG cars all else being equal, because the ratio of AC_energy_consumption / energy_per_mile_consumption is higher.*

    * This confuses a lot of people used to MPG and not GPM.
     
  19. Insight-I Owner

    Insight-I Owner 2006 Insight-I MT + 2011 Prius

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    It may be clearer if you think of it as simply a mismatch of the spin states of the isokinetic warp nodes. Or not.
     
  20. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    Are you sure? That is a hideously low efficiency compared to my home heat pump AC.