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Mileage in Oregon

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Fuel Economy' started by Wognath, Nov 27, 2012.

  1. Wognath

    Wognath Junior Member

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    I have a 2010 Prius. When I lived in Pennsylvania, it got consistently 55 mpg in summer and 45 in winter; the average over the 30000 miles I had on the car was 52.
    I recently moved to Oregon and my mileage has dropped to below 40. True, I am doing more city driving than before, but I'm still getting worse mileage than for city driving back east.
    I took it to the dealer to have the hybrid system checked, and the service rep told me, "Don't bother. This always happens to people who move here. It's our gasoline." I'm skeptical. Most gas stations on PA used 10% ethanol, same as OR. Any comments, particularly from Oregon Prius owners?
     
  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    12 volt battery? short(er) trips?
     
  3. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    I'm skeptical about his gas comment too. But previous experience with another brand taught me that the service reps are really in no position to diagnose the majority of MPG complaints on any car, nor take the considerable time and effort needed teach drivers how to do better.

    Try this: Fuel economy complaints/queries? Please copy, paste & answer these questions, esp. if you're new
     
  4. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    Any chance it has been raining?

    You would be surprised how much energy it takes to move all that water off the roadway. "Spray' is gas mileage lost.
     
  5. Wognath

    Wognath Junior Member

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    Battery is ok, I think. Measures 13 V in the morning. I know increased city driving accounts for some of the mpg decrease, but I would like to know if the Oregon gasoline story the dealer gave me makes any sense. Thanks.
    Here is the questionnaire:

    - What fuel economy are you getting and how are you determining fuel economy?
    40mpg trip computer
    - What fuel economy are you expecting and why? At least 45--that was my winter mileage back east, even city.
    - What are the approximate outside air temps? 40-50F
    - How long are your trips? Typically short, surface streets
    -How old is your 12v battery? original, measures 13V with voltmeter.
    -Have you had your alignment checked? Any pulling or abnormal tire wear? recent alignment
    - How much of it is city vs. highway? mostly city, 25 mph, and generally shorter trips.
    - What's the terrain like of your drives? (e.g. flat, gentle hills, steep hills, etc.) mostly flat
    - What are your tire pressures? 35F 33R
    - Is your oil overfilled? No
    - What region/state are you in? Portland, Oregon
    - How are you trying to drive and how hard are you braking?
    I accelerate gently and try to brake so CHG meter stays on scale.
    - What modes are you using? ECO
    - Are you "warming up" the ICE (internal combustion engine) by letting it idle after powering on? No
    - Are you driving using D or B mode? D
    - HVAC settings? This time of year, heat, set at 72
    - Are you using the factory tires and wheels? Yokohama AVID TRZ (rear), S33 (front--factory, rotated from rear) Factory wheels
    - If reporting a mileage drop, did anything significant change on your car? Change in location and more city driving
     
  6. Wognath

    Wognath Junior Member

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    Yes, it has been raining. Very interesting about the spray. Thanks for that.
    I noticed some decrease in mileage even before it started raining.
     
  7. alwysrit2

    alwysrit2 New Member

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    I live in Forest Grove and work 15 miles away in hillsboro, most of my commute is country road ~50mph. For the summer, I was up to 51+ calculated. Since October, my mileage is gone to mid-40's. When it is dry, I am 47'ish, even in the cold, but when it rains, it drops pretty quick. I don't have a true number on a rain trip yet, but guessing it is closer to 40.
    -Don
     
  8. ProximalSuns

    ProximalSuns Senior Member

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    I have 2012 and get 53 mpg summer and am now getting 52-45 mpg with the "winter" fuel.

    That is interesting as the week I got 45 mpg lots of rain and wind. I only commute three days a week and those three days were storm'in. This week, cold, winter fuel but seeing 52 mpg.
     
  9. GSW

    GSW PRIUS POWER

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    Tire pressure needs to come up a bit if weather allows. FR-40 / RR-38. This makes a big mpg difference on dry payment.
     
  10. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    "13V" makes me think you're measuring the voltage with an analog meter, with a sweeping needle? A digital meter multimeter displaying 1/100ths of a volt is better. A battery in good shape should be above 12.6V, say around 12.75V. All that said, your battery likely is still ok, but worth checking.

    I'd concur raising your tire pressures will help.

    My main suspect: the short trips.
     
  11. retired4999

    retired4999 Prius driver since 2005

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    I agree many small things, tire inflation, rain, set heat to 65 if you can stand it and set fan speed to low setting or as low as possible. Speed kills MPG, go as slow as safety will allow. Short trips is probably the biggest thing for you but can't change that! Your Mileage will improve! Enjoy! :)
     
  12. retired4999

    retired4999 Prius driver since 2005

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    Double post sorry!
     
  13. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    My Gen3 Prius experience is that anything above 12.6V is very unlikely, generally it will be lower. Mine often shows 12.2V. A number of folks reported no problem at 11.8-11.9V, consistent with the scale displayed in Post #16 of only 36-37 average mpg?

    If the engine / hybrid system is turned on, the voltage will jump to the mid 13s to low 14s, but that is the inverter output, not the real battery voltage.
     
  14. ProximalSuns

    ProximalSuns Senior Member

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    On the advice about high pressure tires, no heat or defrost etc.,

    I drive fairly normally, heat set at 70 with defrost full blast in AM, tires to recommended inflation rate and get the 54 mpg high summer to 45 mpg low winter. No need to be uncomfortable or unsafe. You should be getting similar mpg.
     
  15. Wognath

    Wognath Junior Member

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    Many thanks for all the interesting comments.
    Correct. 13 +/- 0.5V So my battery is in the OK range.
    For a similar commute in PA I was getting 55 in the summer and 45 in 20-30 degree weather. Maybe my drive was flatter.
    Another reason to complain about rain!
    Winter fuel? Please explain.
    No way!!!
    This would seem to rule out the Oregon gas idea. I'll work on my city driving skills... Thanks again.
     
  16. alfon

    alfon Senior Member

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    We live in Oregon and have over 88,000 miles on our Prius. Winter with rain, wind, and temps in the 40's,
    will lower your MPG more than any other vehicle on a percentage basis.

    In summer we consistently obtain 51-53 mpg, sometimes more, in winter 45-48 mpg is the rule. When it
    rains, the headlights are on, the windshield wipers are on, the heater / defroster is on, and you plowing through
    rain soaked / flooded roads.
     
  17. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    winter fuel is a formulation for lower pollution in cold weather, costs a few mpg's.
     
  18. CaliforniaBear

    CaliforniaBear Clearwater Blue Metallic

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    Some folks block the radiator air in the winter to make the cooling less efficient hence the ICE runs less to keep up the temperature. I would imagine the cold water spray from the road would have the opposite effect (ie more cooling) so more ICE running and less mileage. I notice the difference here (-3 to 4 mpg) in colder wet weather.
     
  19. xs650

    xs650 Senior Member

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    Good point, and the water also keeps the tires cooler which results in lower pressure than on dry roads and stiffer rubber because it's cold. It's a lose, lose, lose situation.
     
  20. waldo

    waldo Junior Member

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    wind, rain, road spray, along with heater fan, light, radio, and colder weather, have alot to do with poor mileage.
    I keep my tires pressure 42front 40 rear, I have also block off the bottom part of the air intake ( just one row) not all three. I drive mostly i-5 from woodburn to salem 55 to 60 mph with light, heater, fan on low. I average summer time 57-60 mpg winter 52-49 mpg. I also went with Michlen lrr tires this summer and they increase my mileage 2 to 4 mpg. I also when I able to traffic flow ( coast as far as I can )