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Toyota bZ4X 2023 AWD: Why I Sold it and Moved on

Discussion in 'Toyota Hybrids and EVs' started by Tideland Prius, Apr 10, 2023.

  1. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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  2. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    Feeling bad for BZ owners - especially winter driving. Having been at the front of the line for the 1st Nissan Leaf (VIN... 000659) only to end up horribly disappointed - it really sours owner experience. Guessing it's a good thing it's such a whole low volume production - what w/ Toyota stills scrambling to source batteries. That low inventory perhaps will translate out to a lower quantity of disappointed owners.
    .
     
  3. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    I’m surprised Toyota limits charging speed based on ambient temperature rather than the battery pack temp.

    I am glad he went with another EV:)
     
  4. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    When he mentions his stonewall resposnses from Toyota Canada, reminded me of my experience emailing them, with a question regarding spare tire on the 4th gen Prius levels, and this apparent gaff on their website. Their response was that the website info was correct as-is...
     
  5. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    i feel this way about electric cars in general. there are so many new ones out, but the literature doesn't always tell you everything you need to know, and i would rather not be their beta tester at these prices.
    let others lead the way, and i will read the reviews
     
  6. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Me too. This is the first I’ve heard of it. I don’t get it. The bZ4X isn’t warranted for 10 years/240,000km like their hybrids or Prime models. Yet they’re so over protective. I get it that they’re conservative and I like that their vehicles last a long time but there’s a balance between that and usability.

    There are sooo many minor errors on that site. Usually the packages are correct and it’s the standard equipment page that has the errors. Like a locking glovebox on the 2005 Prius or a 120V outlet on the 2020 Prime.
     
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  7. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    Would be interesting to hear John's take.
    .
     
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  8. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    Why? Same old rock and roll
     
  9. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    It's the same old nonsense. I find most reports incomplete & anecdotal. My own long term and detail data collection has begun. I'm working on video setup now for sharing what I discover. So far, the common observed theme is an absence of recognition for how Toyota approaches problem-solving. It is very familiar to Prius ages ago. Enthusiasts are baffled, many failing to see the bigger picture. The classic issue of want verses need is playing out as well. 4X will get updates as the effort to find balance progresses. The crowd currently complaining would have moved on, just writing Toyota off as a competitor. Meanwhile, I'll be enjoying what they found unimportant, stuck on the obsession with range & speed. We all know Toyota takes it slow and is quite capable of adaptation. That scares the others... those needing an antithesis to distract from their own challenges.
     
  10. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Scared of Toyota taking it slow? Pretty sure that’s not the case. Annoyed, disappointed, angry, frustrated are more appropriate emotions.

    Challenges? I was very satisfied with my summer road trip in my EV6. I live in an area with decent DC charging coverage and I have access to 800V DC stations. That means I have the option to charge for 15 mins and head out to the next station (barely enough for a washroom break and a breakfast bagel). But there are also plenty of reliable 50kW chargers that are great for charging while eating a meal or for opportunistic charging. L2 chargers were also great for opportunity charging and meal charging. High AC charging rates let me draw the full 8-9kW that some AC chargers provide.
     
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  11. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    Since scared was never mentioned, not sure why it was injected. As for the other emotions, that applies to the industry as a whole. While Toyota is supposedly "kicking & screaming", we see others presenting a token effort to conceal their true dragging. It's the classic "bait & switch" enthusiasts still haven't caught on to.

    With regard to challenges, that's rather blatant. Infrastructure isn't even enough to get a poor rating and political support remains a joke. Just like we saw with hybrids, transition will be painfully slow. Using Toyota as a scapegoat won't change any of that.

    Read comments posted on EV articles written for ordinary consumers. That should be a wake-up call about priorities.
     
  12. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    I was referring to your last two sentences.
    I agree. Infrastructure is lacking for many parts of the continent. I’m just showing you a sliver of the future when infrastructure is sufficient (barely, but for now sufficient) and reliable. (Never had to move onto another location due to a broken charger - It’s usually reduced power but never lower than 50kW for the ultra fast chargers). We’re also lucky to have super reliable 50kW FLO chargers that our hydro company built out across the province so there’s always a backup if any of the other 3rd party stations go offline or are busy. And our hydro is actively on PlugShare with updates for scheduled maintenance or repairs.

    Yes I applaud Toyota for reliability and longevity but there has to be a balance with usability too. Sure, my 240kW charging will degrade the battery but considering that makes up less than 5% of my annual charging method, it seems a moot point. (And the remaining time, I mostly charge between 60-70% to maintain that longevity). I’m sure I’ve shortened the life a little by DC charging at 35-40°C temps then travelling up a mountain at 120km/h but the fact that I experienced no discernible power loss (I don’t have an OBD reader so I can’t say with absolute certainty) after that charging session is amazing.
     
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  13. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    You used the present tense yourself, that is why it was mentioned.

    As for ‘token effort’ I’d say others are working on their supply chains. Ford is accelerating quite quickly, Tesla is accelerating faster than anyone.
    Toyota is building a substandard BEV. For what reason, we don’t know, but they aren’t competing on range, charge speed, price, or reliability (at this point).
    I don’t see how anyone can see Toyota as doing anything but scrambling to catch up.
     
  14. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Not only that, we’re still waiting for the RAV4 Primes and Prius Primes, never mind BEVs. There’s been a trickle of units coming into Canada. The RAV4 Prime is the perfect combination for many people in Canada and yet we’ve barely gotten any.
     
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  15. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Off-topic, but as long as EV dashboards look like this:

    upload_2023-4-16_8-38-44.png

    I can't even begin to be interested.
     
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  16. Zythryn

    Zythryn Senior Member

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    You take a single example and apply it to all EVs?
     
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  17. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    What I'd like to see, is pretty much obsolete I guess, on cars of any ilk: H/V controls that can be adjusted easily, with eyes on the road. What I've started referring to as "negative progress".

    Hey, I'm off-topic.
     
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  18. Isaac Zachary

    Isaac Zachary Senior Member

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    I was part of the 1st Gen Nissan Leaf "expirement". When range on a battery with 12% of brand new suddenly crawls down to half of what you'd expect just because of cold air temperature is not a great experience. (Car, with heat pump, dies 30 miles out of town after leaving with 100% and me only turning on the heater off and on as necessary to keep the windshield defrosted.)

    I'm also with @Mendel Leisk with designs getting out of hand. Now my Avalon is phantom changing heating and A/C settings as I drive around. And those are "touch buttons" not even a touch screen. They still require me to look down even when they work correctly. Meanwhile, another neighbor got ran over just last week. That's like the 12th person I've known to get ran over. If you want to save the world from air polution at least make it safe for people to use their own two legs to get around instead of making these stupid ginormous SUV's with touchscreen everything!

    I'm glad Toyota is doing something to get into the EV market. But their current offering here in the USA is as far away from the kind of thing I'd be willing to buy and own it's never going to happen unless someone gave me the bee-zee... bee-zed... bee-whatever the name is, for free.
     
  19. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    ^ I wouldn’t take it for free. I’d rather have a Prius Prime over the bZ4X (Prime XSE Premoum for $50k or bZ4X LE FWD for $50k Canadian dollars). Heck, the RAV4 Prime (if they ever build enough of them) is a much better overall package imo for a similar price.
     
  20. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    That's easy. Some see the race as a sprint. Others see it as a marathon. Know your audience.