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Cannot pull the trigger to buy Prius v

Discussion in 'Prius v Main Forum' started by David Lack, Apr 27, 2013.

  1. skwcrj

    skwcrj Member

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    What's their resoning? Car enthusiast rate good cars by horsepower and acceleration. The Prius would not make it on the list.

    Actually MOST cars don't have a problem. It's a small percentage. I have over 17K miles on mine with no brake groan.

    At the current average of $5.00 AUD/gal and assuming 15K miles per year:
    Car A (a typical hatchback) averaging 30 mpg will cost 500g X 5.00 = 2500 AUD
    Prius V avg 42 mpg -- 357 g X 5.00 = 1785 AUD
    Difference ~ 700 AUD per year. 10K / 700 = 14 years.

    If you are planning on keeping it 'till it dies (I'm on the same plan), the V will save you even more in petrol and maintenance.

    Ultimately, you need to make the decision as to what will make you happy. A car that saves you money in the long run may not be as rewarding to drive/enjoy. Prius is not for everyone. If you need the "vroom-vroom", Prius is not for you. Don't get me wrong. It has plenty of pickup for normal daily driving but ...

     
  2. iClaudius

    iClaudius Active Member

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    More irrelevant to a discussion on break even point on a Prius for average drivers.

    Someone putting 120,000 miles per year on a vehicle needs an intervention. They are spending 72 hours, 3 days a year, in their car. And it is an environmental disaster, spewing tons of pollutants into the air and water and a financial disaster spending $10K a year on gasoline.

    I'm sure there are nutcases like that out there but exposing the poor psychos and holding them up as examples of why to buy a Prius is meaningless.
     
  3. skwcrj

    skwcrj Member

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    You mean like cab drivers and other people who depend on driving their Prius for a living. And imagine how much more they would "spew and polute" if they drove a non-hybrid. Maybe we should go back to riding horses. What do you think?o_O
     
  4. wjtracy

    wjtracy Senior Member

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    In our Gasoline Sales thread the recent price of gaso in Australia is $5.46 vs. $3.59 for US average. So it depends how many miles per year you put onto the car.

    In the USA, the example I have been using is CAMRY LE Hybrid vs. CAMRY LE. Cost difference here approaches $5000 for the hybrid. But it gets 40 MPG vs. 28 MPG. Then I run tax calcs for different state tax scenarios. Some states like VA tax hybrids pretty hard, so between state taxes and initial cost, it is hard to pay off the hybrid version unless you are 15,000 miles per year or more. I think it is possible I would get a used hybrid next time, in order to have the math work out for savings in Virginia's tax scenario.
     
  5. skwcrj

    skwcrj Member

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    Or maybe some people need to go home and rethink before posting completely useless off the topic post...;)
     
  6. iClaudius

    iClaudius Active Member

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    Well...who knows...maybe Jimbo's post about someone driving 120,000 miles a year was relevant for the folks looking at buying a Prius V and was not as completely useless and off topic as you state.
     
  7. skwcrj

    skwcrj Member

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    Of course, that information is very useful. It's nice to see how our cars will perform based on the accelerated aging of cars like 2fas4u or some of the numerous cab drivers who post on these forums.

    However, the diatribes about the evils of driving cars and the pollution by those who drive for a living is pointless in this discussion. I believe that there is a whole subforum for those kind of discussions. Perhaps you can start a thread about it there.

    Enough said. Let's move on to the topic at hand.
     
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  8. jonb505

    jonb505 Member

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    You gotta do the math for yourself and figure if its worth it. Can you live with something cheaper? how long do you plan to keep it? 5-10 years is a long time. My last car bought new, a 2008 honda fit I sold to buy the v after only 4 years of ownership which felt like an eternity. :)
    Not a bad car if you don't drive much, but i ended up selling the 4 year old honda with 198,000km on it. I fully intended to keep the honda for 10+ years, it eventually just wore me out, very tiring to drive long distances so i wanted something more comfortable without sacrificing internal space or fuel economy.
    The v was last on my list when first checking out the prius family. It came down to wanting the softex seats and the cargo space was a bonus for hauling my mountain bikes to the trail. the v luxury package was cheaper than the liftback tech package so that did it for me.
    35,000km in to ownership including some long distance road trips I can see many happy years ahead with this car. Its a pleasure to drive in the city and comfy highway cruiser, an "appliance" if you will, and that suits me just fine. :)
     
  9. PLSPUSH

    PLSPUSH Active Member

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  10. David Lack

    David Lack Junior Member

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    Lot's of good discussion thanks everyone. For me, I do not care about the "driving experience". I am not a big car enthusiast and don't understand the FUN to drive aspect of a car. I do understand it for a racing or performance vehicle but with an everyday vehicle, after the NEW novelty wears off, it's just driving a vehicle ho hum...to me anyway.

    As far as keeping a vehicle till it dies, my last car, a Ford Explorer Sport was 14 years old and only gave it up because we moved to Australia.

    I like the idea of having the space and room of the Prius V, my 5' wife needs to be able to drive it and she does not like SUV style vehicles. In Australia the price of gas is about 4.75 a gallon. I do find the hybrid technology interesting and there is enough tech in the base model to interest me.

    The one hinderance is that the base model costs about 33K in Australia. If it were 28K I would most likely buy it in a second, though there are other vehicles that get between 30 and 35 MPG, not hybrid, that might be about 3 or 4K cheaper.

    I have to go over all the numbers but it really seems like the Hybrid might cost slightly more unless gas prices hike up again, which they probably will.
     
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  11. iClaudius

    iClaudius Active Member

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    It means if you pay $5,000 more for a hybrid, when will your recoup that money via gas savings.
     
  12. PLSPUSH

    PLSPUSH Active Member

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  13. PLSPUSH

    PLSPUSH Active Member

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    Mr. Lack, I tend not to look at the overall cost of a car, simply the monthly payment as I tend not to keep cars for very long anyway. by all means if it does not make financial sense to you pass it up.
     
  14. David Lack

    David Lack Junior Member

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    Is it true that you have to use Premium unleaded in the Prius V? I am starting to see this as recommended but what are your experiences? Thanks.
     
  15. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    No every Prius is fine on regular. Some have hinted Premium may help going uphill.
     
  16. PLSPUSH

    PLSPUSH Active Member

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    not here, but can't speak for your country
     
  17. euggie

    euggie Junior Member

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    Absolutely, sir. My similar story had the opposite outcome: My daily driver was a Camry XLE Hybrid for a couple years. When it was time to trade in the wife's Sienna, I was drooling over a Prius because I love how quiet, comfortable, and gizmo-loaded they are.

    At the end of the day, we figured that we already have something with great MPGs and serenity, so we opted to go with the far less responsible FR-S. It's spartanly equipped, deafeningly loud compared to the HyCam, and only gets about 28MPG with me behind the wheels; but its $10k cheaper, and it puts a smile on my face.

    The best I can explain it is that, it's agape with the Camry, but lust for the FR-S. I love driving either cars, and I am sure I would have loved the Prius, too. But this is what works for us today :)

    ImageUploadedByTapatalk1367121072.688481.jpg
     
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  18. skwcrj

    skwcrj Member

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    David,

    As you crunch the numbers, consider this. It doesn't take much to get the V to yield 45-50 mpg (5.2 to 4.6 l/100km) per tank. As you go to the gas station, you endup putting 8-9 gals each fillup (unless you tend to stretch your tanks). That's 38.00 -42.75 per fill up. You can expect 400+ miles per tank (over 500 if you play the mpg game).

    IMHO, if you decide on the V, just get the basic package. Here in the US a V2 comes loaded with great technology.

    Good luck. I hope the V works out for you.
     
  19. David Lack

    David Lack Junior Member

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    Thanks. Yes I was only looking at the base model. The i-Tech is about 8k more expensive here and I don't think it offers THAT much more for technology. I don't need the GPS or sun roof or auto Cruise Control adjust etc.
     
  20. David Lack

    David Lack Junior Member

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    Looks like I can get one with about 4k Miles on it for 32k drive away...Might be able to get them down to 31k. So I am looking at that. It was a demo model and has 6200 km on the odometer.
     
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