I have had the car for 3 1/2 years and 35,000 miles and I generally have averaged about 42-45 MPG in my normal mixed driving of about 90% suburban surface street driving and some short highway drives. I never bothered to "try" to get high mpg other than than not driving "hard." No special hyper-miling techniques used. All of a sudden with no change in driving habits or weather compared to prior years, I'm now seeming the lowest mpg I have ever seen since the car was new. I have started to get about 35mpg in the city and it is a struggle to get any higher. If I turn off the a/c and drive extra lightly, I still cannot crack 40mpg according to the display. If I get on the highway, it shows 50+mpg at a steady 65mph. Of course I checked the tire pressure and it is the same as it always has been. I set it at the levels shown on the door jamb and that has not be altered in 3 years. I have also had the issue through the last two tanks of gas purchased at different gas stations and I am not carrying any more passengers or ant more weight than before. Since it is not the tire pressure nor a change in driving habits or location, what else would suddenly cause a drop in city mpg?
The following link might help as this "unexplained-major-drop-in-city-fuel-economy" falls under the weird stuff happening category: Weird stuff happening? MPGs dropping? Test The Battery | PriusChat Sorry. I pasted the wrong link.
I mentioned in the post that I already checked and it is not tire pressure just so that no one would make that suggestion.
Sorry about that chief. You are correct. It could be a number of things. Sometimes MPG drop when the 12v battery start to decline. If you car is 3 1/2 years old chances are that is not your issue. I can't say, dirty air filter, fuel mix change, poor calculation standards. Perhaps one of the master mechanics will pick up your thread and respond
Given the obvious things, might be a bad cell(s) in the HV battery. Might try a hard reboot. Disconnect the 12v for a few minutes. That will reset your FE stats however.
Actually the 12v battery would be on my suspect list if it were mainly city fuel economy that is being affected since good city mpg relies on the engine turning off. On the highway the engine stays on so it shouldn't be affected as bad.
Hey Justin, He did say that this is happening in "my normal mixed driving of about 90% suburban surface street driving and some short highway drives". Maybe the short highway driving is not enough to offset the horrible city mpg? Just thinking aloud....
Not sure where your located. Patrick Wong in Arizona is very good. Patrick Wong | PriusChat Avi in Los Angeles is an expert. Avi's Advanced Automotive | PriusChat Your dealer may able to help
Hey wait a minute!! Why involve professionals? This is the internet afterall. We have a huge collection of "experts" here.
That's what I was thinking. He said that on the freeway it will hold 50+mpg so that sounds pretty normal. He also said that turning off the A/C didn't help. The main problem with the A/C in the city is the engine doesn't like to turn off as often so we have a similar condition to a 12v drain. I'm not a big pusher of the 12v failure idea usually but this one seems weird that the loss is city only.
The reason why this is unusual is that this style of driving is not new. Nothing about the driving style has changed. I have been doing mostly the same driving in the same area for the last 3 years and the mileage just changed on the last couple tankfuls of gas. I have ordered a new air filter that I will install this weekend and I will have the 12v battery checked at the dealer. I don't remember ever getting the battery replaced since the car was new. I would have to look through all the service records to check, but I doubt it. Does the 12v battery generally need replacement at around 3 or 4 years?
12V battery failure at 4 years old is rare but possible. Worth it to test and eliminate that as a potential issue. Air filter sounds like it especially if it has never been replaced. I have heard of a dealer adjusting the parking break to tight which impacted the MPG. I also heard overfilling the oil can be a Culprit
Air filter has definitely been replaced at least once since the car was new. I have had a previous car where the 12v battery started going bad before the car was 3 years old and was replaced under warranty. This car is now out of basic warranty by age, so I thought that maybe 3 1/2 years might not be that unusual for battery to start degrading. I don't see any other sign of the battery failing since it starts up normally and I don't see anything else such as dim lights. Not sure how many years is normal for a 12v battery on a Gen III Prius.
It is hard to say how long they last. It depends how you cared for it. I put this from another post that may shed some light.
Has your SOC gauge been "normal"? Although my FE is normal, one thing I have noticed is my SOC has been a bar or two lower than "normal" for the last three months. We will see if that changes with summer coming.
Just to be sure... Have you run the 12v battery completely dead recently? Either way, doing the test in the link above could help eliminate 12v battery issues. One more question... have you noticed any odd behavior (rapid charging/discharging) behavior of the HV battery as you drive around the city? Keep us posted. We are all curious.... Edit: Sorry spiderman. You beat me to it. Great minds must think alike...