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Questions from a potential buyer

Discussion in 'Newbie Forum' started by Lance Coon, Nov 9, 2013.

  1. Lance Coon

    Lance Coon Junior Member

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    2013 Prius c
    Model:
    Three
    I'm looking in the next few months to buy a Prius. Most likely a used, or a new Prius C. I have spent a considerable amount of time researching here and reading an operation manual for the Prius C. I have a few questions I would like answered, and hope they are new questions and not something i skipped over here since there is a considerable amount of information I still have not read.

    I live in Iowa so we expect snow, cold winters, and all that great driving weather. I have read about the snow tires, and buying extra rims.. but one thing I read in the owners manual is, when the heater is on the engine will run. They even said try not to use the heater in excess (they say the same for the A/C) So my question is... In the colder winter months, will the MPG take a significant dip? If so, how much of a dip are we talking about?

    Staying on the winter theme.. What if, God forbid I hit a patch of ice, and go creaming into the snow filled ditch. I understand the Prius' traction control doesn't like it if you are spinning wheels and will cut power to save costly repairs down the road.. but if the car was really wedged in the snow bank.. could you use something like the emergency toe line (in the front of the car) to have another truck, car, etc.. pull you out? or would it be safer to call a tow truck?

    There was an indicator light, I didn't quite understand on the instrument cluster. 'Slip indicator Light' I'm guessing it indicated when the tires are not grabbing on the road.. or is it? Could someone explain this a little better to me?

    In the owners manual they are very vague about the wear or replacement of the traction battery. I didn't see any message in the community relating to a replacement issue, but wondered how long (in general) it would last. I no this topic was covered before in the forum. The conclusion was it will be a long time before they are useless. The only reason I bring this up again is that I'm a heavy driver I log about 30,000 miles a year. So wear and tear is really on my mind when I'm researching a new car.
     
  2. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    Vehicle:
    2012 Prius v wagon
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    I am in Mississippi, so winter has less of a bite. My coldest tank in my v was 35 MPG, where my warmest tank was 46 MPG, so a 10 MPG drop is not unbelievable, but a c should do 50 in the summer at sensible speeds.
    There is a screw-in tow hook on both my Gen 2 and my v, so the c may have one as well.

    Yes the slip indicator will light when you spin the tires.

    The c was introduced in 2012, so it is likely that no cases of HV battery failure have occurred yet. Gen 1 (2001 to 2003) are having failure fairly frequently now, and Gen 2 (2004 to 2009) are just starting to not be unusual. The c uses a different pack than either of those (144 volt rather than 288 volt or 201 volt) so no-one can make iron clad predictions, but I would budget $1000 by 2022. There is no reason to suspect that more c owners won't total their car than ruin their battery, so ebay will have a low cost supply from unfortunate owners.
    http://www.ebay.com/itm/2012-TOYOTA-PRIUS-BATTERY-PACK-MODEL-C-PART-G9280-52030-/321238506857

    (This is hare brained theory, not fact) It is my contention that the HV battery is pampered by the computer, so time being driven is better than time sitting parked. All the Prius with amazing mileage before battery failure are taxis, driven 24/7, so do not fear driving your Prius 30,000 miles a year. (My theory is that summer heat and winter drain age a battery more than just miles)
     
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  3. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    it's not a subaru or other all wheel drive vehicle. it does pretty well in winter, but if you need to be out in a lot of bad weather, it may not be the right car for you.
     
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  4. spiderman

    spiderman wretched

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    welcome aboard!

    my '10 takes about a 10 mpg hit in the winter. i run studded snows on corolla steel wheels.

    traction was just as good or better than our 97 camry. there is always a chance you will need a tow... plan on it.

    the prius loves to be driven... better than just sitting around.
     
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  5. Lance Coon

    Lance Coon Junior Member

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    Three
    Thanks everyone! I'm always a little scared.. winter wise, some winters it's easy other winters we have a snow storm every other weekend. But if pushed come to shove I could always stay with friends near where I work (40 miles away)

    Thanks spiderman.. I use to drive a 96 camry, so I can relate to what you're droppin'.

    One other question I wanted to ask.. why would you ever want to use 'B' on the shifter? As far as I remember B is for the Engine Break? I hope I read the manual right. What's the difference between driving in 'D' and 'B' or is 'B' just a way to slow down on steep hills?
     
  6. JimboPalmer

    JimboPalmer Tsar of all the Rushers

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    Yes. Use it when you would use L in a 'normal' car, almost never.
     
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  7. Lance Coon

    Lance Coon Junior Member

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    Thanks again JimboPalmer! It's a lot more to learn than on a regular car.. I'm glad there is a group of car owners that are passionate and willing to talk to noobs like me. :D
     
  8. xpcman

    xpcman Senior Member

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    You don't have hills in Iowa. The highest point in Iowa in something like 1,600 feet in the middle of a corn field.
     
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  9. Lance Coon

    Lance Coon Junior Member

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    For us Iowans a climb of 5 degrees is a mountain. ;) To be honist the only reason I ask, is every once in a great while I like to take a trip to Oakland to visit family.. hate flying, would much rather drive.. love the mountain ranges. Much more to look at than a row of corn :D
     
  10. mikefocke

    mikefocke Prius v Three 2012, Avalon 2011

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    I had no experience driving a hybrid when I bought mine other than two short test drives. Yes there are always instruments to get used to and indicators...true of any new car. And a little different starting procedure and parking procedure. But most of the time you can just drive it. Learn the nuances as you go. If I could at 70...a youngster like you should have no trouble at all.

    I use B once a day maybe coming down a long steep hill to a stoplight to use max braking regen (charges battery and simulates brakes). Other than that I drive in ECO mode unless I really want to jackrabbit out ahead of traffic crossing a highway with oncoming traffic when I use PWR.

    Traction batteries can last longer than a normal gas engine. 12v batteries fail just like any car.

    Any car gets worse gas mileage when it is really cold. Rich mixture and the catalysts haven't warmed up. Hybrids that start out electric in the spring, have to warm up the cabin and the defrost air in the winter so they start out with the gas running until things get hot enough so they can retreat to normal mode.
     
  11. kenmce

    kenmce High Voltage Member

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    The car is there to serve you. If you need the heat, use it. Don't be a slave to the MPG.


    There are lots of Pri up in Canada. They can handle the cold. You do need real winter tires, and should not go into snow that is high enough to touch the belly of the car. You can get into a situation where the middle of the car is lifted up on snow and the tires hang uselessly.

    That's for the transaxle. The car babies its components.


    That's what it's there for. There is a steel "O" tow ring in the trunk that is about as thick as your thumb. It screws into the front bumper. You could probably hang the car by it, although I'm sure it would beep at you. The various beeps mean Toyota does not approve.

    That's a judgement call, depends on what you've got to pull with and how simple the situation is. If you're 50' out into the swamp and have nothing but a rusted out Pinto and some clothesline to pull with, well the tow truck starts to look better.


    Just means one or more tires are slipping and the car is unhappy about it. If it's the one with a little car on top of two "S" shaped lines, that's the sideways slip indicator. I get it when I drift the turn into the local interstate on-ramp.

    They last a long time. Just the warranty runs a good ten years. If one dies you can get a used one from a wreck. They survive anything.

    We have stickies for 100K, 200K, and I think 300K(?) on the odometer in the Gen. II section. The Prius taxis run up a lot of miles. Browse around and see how they're doing. People here are not shy about bringing up problems.

    I think of Toyotas as being good to 200K, more if you take care of them. The Prius is no different.
     
  12. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    This graph provides a general idea of the winter dip...

    [​IMG]

    ...north of you, here in Minnesota, where I obviously see colder conditions. In fact, the forecast tonight is for a low of 7°F.

    As was already pointed out, all vehicles take a hit. Most people never noticed though, since they didn't have a screen showing them and the difference seems less when the numbers are lower to begin with.

    The heater info you were provided was misleading. The heater will indeed cause the engine to start, but it won't prevent it from shutting off. When warmed up, the engine stops... but the heater keeps running... since the coolant retains far more heat than you'll consume right away. Years ago, I remembering measuring the engine on/off cycle while shut in a snowy commute traffic jam. It was 8 minutes. That saves quiet a bit of gas.