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Value of a PIP with 38 mile one-way commute?

Discussion in 'Gen 1 Prius Plug-in 2012-2015' started by davekro, Oct 28, 2013.

  1. davekro

    davekro Member

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    Obviously the PIP was not designed for optimal use with a 38 mile one-way commute. But I'm just curious of people's experience/ MPG's that have such a commute with the PIP? With the offer of a 2013 PIP FOR $27,172 out the door it seems silly not to buy one instead of say a Prius three for about the same.

    My wife will be the commuter in this and I'm a little concerned about her pulling out in the morning rush without unplugging the cable. If we charge it for three hours at 110 V in the evening and unplug it before going to bed, would we still have essentially a full charge when she leaves in the morning?

    What kind of tricks do you use to avoid forgetting to unplug the cord? :) I was thinking of putting a small wheel chock underneath the rear drivers wheel to avoid backing up as a reminder. I can just see that right rear quarter panel with the plug being out of side and out of mind to my wife in her hectic rush out of the house in the morning.

    Her work does have five charging stations but I think two of three of those are reserved, so I guess if you're not the early bird you don't get to charge that day. Is that the way it works, or do people move their cars off mid day to leave the spot for someone else?

    What ballpark average MPG's might she expect with a 38 mile one-way commute:
    1) if she is able to get a full charge at work?
    2) if she is unable to charge at work?
    He does often leave late and have a lot of stop and go driving, so that definitely would bump up her and MPGs. She rarely has a straight drive at freeway speeds if ever.
    Thanks
     
  2. jdk2

    jdk2 Active Member

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    It won't even start while plugged in so you don't need to worry about that..

    Not sure of the mileage in your scenario as I'm retired and don't commute regularly.
     
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  3. davekro

    davekro Member

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    That is GREAT to know and relieves a lot of worries!
    Thanks for response
     
  4. zhenya

    zhenya Active Member

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    I would expect mid-60's on the low end, and significantly better when she can plug in at work or if she is willing to pay attention to what the car is doing. Under those conditions, 80-100mpg might be attainable.

    What's your location? The two things that hurt battery range are cold weather and steep hills.
     
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  5. jdk2

    jdk2 Active Member

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    I bought the car because most of my local driving is under 11 miles. Even when out of EV miles, the car does better than the regular Prius due too the larger battery and its ability to regen more. I had to drive in HV for the first 550 miles since I bought it out of state. Since then I haven't used much gas and expect not to have to get any until after the new year.

    Your wife would probably do very well with the PIP even at a 38 mile commute. 11 of the miles would be in EV and the rest in HV which would give her a very respectable MPG overall. I got about 55mpg calculated running from NJ to NC in HV mode at 70MPH. The car had no charge on it when I picked it up.

    Charging stations seem to have no rhyme or reason to the way people use them Some just plug in and stay that way all day. However, if they're at your wife's place of business, perhaps she could find out who the cars belong to and work out a schedule of charging that meets both of their needs. Who knows but it might be worth looking into.
     
  6. CharlesH

    CharlesH CA HOV Decal #5 on former PiP

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    You can't just assume that charging stations at work are free. Mine are $1/hr for the first 5 hours, $5/hr thereafter. It's really on the edge of cost effectiveness for the PiP, and I am there to disconnect it the instant charging completes.
     
  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    the car has a timer, so you can plug in at night, but have it turn on 3 hours before leaving. it doesn't lose charge overnight, but it's not a good idea to leave it fully charged everyday. for a similar price to a regular prius, you get a few upgrades, plus lion battery which is more efficient. however, you don't get a spare tyre because the battery is there. when i drive to my fathers every week, it's around 70-80 miles and i only charge when leaving home. i usually get around 90 mpg, this is not considering the electrical use which costs around .50 at .16/ kwh. all the best!(y)
     
  8. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    IMG_20131028_211754.jpg

    This was from the trip back home with a full charge at in-law.

    It was an hour and 12 mins drive covering 49.1 miles. We used heater when ICE was used.

    0.585 gallons burned at the rate of about an ounce per min.

    Weather is getting cold. Air in tire was 37 psi front / 35 back (for comfort) before the temp dropped.

    I love this car!
     
  9. kwintone

    kwintone Junior Member

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    I have a 26-mile commute to work that is mostly freeway driving. From my home to the freeway is about 3-miles, 22-miles on freeway (@65-75mph), and then 1-mile from freeway to work.

    Drove a total of 56-miles today with 83 MPGe* - if I did the calculation correctly. PIP was fully charged in the morning (2:22 @120V) and fully charged at work (1:31 @240V). Luckily, the parking garage at work has 12 EV spots (w/ 4-hour limit) and to date I have always found open spots. One of the first days I had the PIP I did not charge at work and obtained 49.0 MPG (calculated by entune app, did not have numbers saved for that trip).

    Of course, living in CA one of the main reasons I purchased the PIP was for HOV-access.

    *MPGe=(EV miles + HV miles)/((HV gallons+0.5) + ((EV kWh/0.85)/33.7))
     
  10. davekro

    davekro Member

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    We are in east of the SF Bay area. In the valley/ on the Delta. Summer averages high 80's to mid-upper 90's. Winters are mild. In the garage over night it might get down to 40 degree F.
     
  11. davekro

    davekro Member

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    I just read up on her charging stations. There are 5 but three are reserved in some way I am not clear on. If she signs up with blink, it is $1/hour for level 2 (220v). so that should only take 1 1/2 hours per Toyota. So $1.50. Blink has an App that texts you when you are full (or you set time it hit, I don't know which). So now I see it is like a parking meter. Whoever is on it will move out at their earliest convenience (I assume), to free it up for another EV to use it. At home our electricity at our current usage tier is .15 / kWh, so that should cost a lot less than $1.50 per charge.
     
  12. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    $1.50/ charge is equal to $6.00/gallon gas approximately. .15/kwh equals $2.00/gallon.
     
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  13. mmmodem

    mmmodem Senior Taste Tester

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    With my 53 mile one way trip, I'm averaging 82 mpg. Look at my signature pic and you will see 105 mpg was my best effort for my commute. If I forget to charge or the spot at work is taken I get 65 mpg. I set the timer to finish charging right before I leave in the morning. I can pretty much guarantee you won't be paying $0.15 per kWh. That's how much I pay for electricity. But remember, the PiP takes a little over 3 kWh per charge. Multiply by 30 days is 100 kWh and you're in the $0.30 tier rates. That's more expensive than gasoline. I had to switch to TOU plans for it to make sense.
     
  14. markabele

    markabele owner of PiP, then Leaf, then Model 3

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    Can't believe no one has suggested a Volt yet. The amount of miles daily make it a better candidate then the PiP IMO.
     
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  15. davekro

    davekro Member

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    I'll have to look close at our PG&E bill to see how much head room we have in out .15 tier. Our total gas and electricty runs around $65 usually to $85 sometimes. I have always avoided the TOU idea since we do use AC so sparingly, I'd hate to be throttled or pay huge when we do use it on those super hot days (when everyone else is too.) But with adding a PIP int the equation, I can see how TOU could be much better, even if I get the occasional hit for actually using my house AC ;o)

    Timer:
    Do you just use a cheapie 15 amp timer like you would for say a lamp? Or is it better to get a heavier duty timer? Is there a particular kind for 110v? Actually I have an outdoor box timer made for a hot tub that I never bothered to hook up to our (dry and never used) hot tub! So do you time it to charge in the hours just before you leave for work mostly becuase of the TOU, or because if you charged it, (even after TOU hours say 7:00pm to 10:00pm) in the evening, it would still lose a bit over night?

    Are the pricy 220V charging home charging stations' only value cutting the charge time in half, of is there some other advantage?

    After your 53 mile drive, do you find that your EV battery is mostly depleted, or actually only in need of significantly less than a full (220v) half hour charge? My wife often has stop and go driving, but more on th efirst half of her commute I think.
     
  16. markabele

    markabele owner of PiP, then Leaf, then Model 3

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    Car has a built in timer. You don't need to buy one.

    Very little value in cutting charge time in half. You definitely won't see a return on that money.

    There is strategy when and how to use your EV miles. Takes some learning but someone can just drive it and do well, too.

    Why again are you not considering a Volt?
     
  17. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    Have you ever sat in the back of one? It's easy to see on paper that the legroom is much smaller than Prius. But it isn't until you actually get in that you realize the head placement for adults is so different. It certainly surprised me.

    My 62-mile drive yesterday with only a single charge resulted in an average of 76 MPG.

    My vacation trips (100's of miles without recharging) this summer using A/C carrying lots of cargo inside and 2 bikes on back averaged upper 40's.

    My clean-up effort at mom's these past 2 weekends resulted in hauling 3 large loads of junk.

    Prius PHV is more competitive that it initially seems...
     
  18. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    A PiP charges at a little over 2 kW at 240v. At $1 an hour fee it can be twice as expensive to drive in EV than to just drive on gas at 50mpg with $3.75 a gallon gas. At 30 kWh or so for 100 miles that would be around $15. 100 miles on gas would be about 2 gallons at $3.75 for a total of $7.50.

    I believe Blink charging stations round up partial hours so if a Prius took 1.5 hours for a full charge then Blink would bill that as 2 hours. By contrast, ChargePoint stations will pro-rate to the nearest minute so 1.5 hours is billed as 1.5 hours, not 2 hours like Blink.
     
  19. zhenya

    zhenya Active Member

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    The primary value of the 220v charging stations is convenience and a quicker charge. There is a slight energy savings in the efficiency of charging at 220v vs. 120, but it's tiny and not worth considering. Note that there is a 30% federal government tax rebate towards the cost of installing a home charger, and your local area may have additional incentive.

    Realistically the battery charges very quickly to about 80% and then slows way down. When I use one of the few public 220v chargers in my area it seems to give me about 9 miles of range in 50 minutes or so of charge. So it's well worth plugging in even just for a short while.

    I also agree that you should consider the Volt as it's a nicer car in many ways and she could potentially do her entire round-trip commute all electric.

    One thing to note with the PIP is it's not really designed to be an EV. There are all sorts of ways to trigger the gas engine. It will still get great mileage, but for someone who really wants the EV experience, there might be better options.
     
  20. chesleyn

    chesleyn Active Member

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    I have a 31 mile one way commute. It's all uphill from Long Beach. I get 10 miles EV heading up 21 miles HV. Sometimes I grab coffee on the way to work and charge for an hour and get 20 miles EV. The return trip is downhill so it is reversed – 20 miles EV and 10 miles HV. I charge at work.

    I average about 110 mpg on my commute (2 days a week). Note... I'm very mindful of charging as often as possible. What's interesting is I visit new places I would never visit prior, because I take my iPad with me and sit and drink a cup of coffee and grab a piece of pie at random places to get a charge. Plugshare is a great app BTW to find these random places.