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Featured The story behind the Prius

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by usbseawolf2000, Dec 2, 2015.

  1. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    they all had good intentions, and were busy paving a road...
     
  2. Robert Holt

    Robert Holt Senior Member

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    IIRC, on a cross-country flight around 2001-2002, I fell into conversation with a mid level GM executive, and took the opportunity to suggest that they needed more engineers to design and build more technically advanced cars. He responded that I was wrong and that the key to increasing sales was to hire more designers so that their cars looked better. If he reflected the corporate culture, the lack of technical development makes sense.
     
  3. FL_Prius_Driver

    FL_Prius_Driver Senior Member

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    The other tricky misconception echoed by this executive is "more designers" makes the cars look better. Vast volumes of mediocrity will always be eclipsed with just one first rate designer. Are you sure this guy was not in the human resources department? That is how they think.
     
  4. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    i found the same problem during my working career. marketing was always over rated by the powers that be. engineering was just there to do their bidding.
     
  5. SlowTurd

    SlowTurd I LIKE PRIUS'S

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    it's still fugly
    they should have brought the AWD version here in the US to offset it's fuglyness
     
  6. frodoz737

    frodoz737 Top Wrench

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    Works for Subaru. Like the Prius it's a quality car, but(t) ugly.
     
  7. SlowTurd

    SlowTurd I LIKE PRIUS'S

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    it will sell well at first and then become the "aztek" of hybrids
     
  8. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    i don't think so. it will probably sell based on gas prices, just like the current model. will the new features lure more buyers, or the design drive some away? that will be hard to determine.

    imo, the only driving factors for alt fuel vehicles are gas prices and car prices.
     
  9. energyandair

    energyandair Active Member

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    Once it was known that that 100% increase in mpg was probably available with hybrid, resetting the target to 100% is significantly different from deciding on hybrid and is much better.

    Rather than senior management dictating solutions to people who are probably far better able to understand and develop them, it sets an ambitious but reasonable target, focusses efforts on what matters, leaves room to take advantage of unexpected innovation or opportunities, and results in a more motivated and creative development team.

    It appears to me that rather than having decided on hybrid, he thought it was likely the best path but had the wit to leave other opportunities open and get the most out of his team.
     
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  10. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Who knows if fortune got the story right, it is so much later and lots of revision.

    Gore's PNGV was supposed to make american car makers leap frog imports in efficiency, and they chose 80 mpg. Ford fought for an easier goal. PNGV would not bend, and so excluded toyota (goal was american competitiveness not just lower oil use) and only technologies seemed very expensive diesel hybrids that could not meat epa regulations or fcv.

    Toyota management, according to the fortune version of the story set a goal like ford's proposal. When engineers proposed econobox or hybrid, they set the mpg goal high enough that it would not be met by econobox. If they had failed it just would have been a foot note of history like pngv. Management looked at engineering input before making the decision. Toyota had the econobox echo or tercel or whatever it was at the time if prius failed.
     
  11. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Toyota's initial goal was 50% better than Corolla. It was moved up to 100% later.

    1994 Corolla was rated 24-25 MPG. When 2001 Prius was released, it was rated 48 MPG.
     
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  12. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Instead, the PNGV budget was redirected to a decade of fool-cell subsidies . . . and delivered. In 2015, these are the rankings:
    model MPG
    1 I8 409.9
    2 I3 BEV 196.4
    3 NISSAN LEAF SL 183.9
    4 SPARK EV 183.5
    5 NISSAN LEAF S 180.4
    6 e-Golf 179.2
    7 e-Golf 177.8
    8 NISSAN LEAF SL 177.6
    9 500e 174.9
    10 500e 174.9
    11 smart fortwo electric drive (convertible) 173.8
    12 I3 BEV 159.1
    13 FOCUS 157.2
    14 SPARK EV 156.3
    15 500e 154.5
    16 500e 154.5
    17 e-Golf 149.7
    18 e-Golf 149.5
    19 NISSAN LEAF SL 146.4
    20 NISSAN LEAF S 144.2
    21 NISSAN LEAF SL 143.4
    22 FOCUS 141.4
    23 C-Max (PHEV) 135
    24 smart fortwo electric drive (convertible) 133.2
    25 B-class electric drive 121.9
    26 918 Spyder 118.8
    27 918 Spyder 117.9
    28 B-class electric drive 117
    29 C-Max (PHEV) 116.4
    30 Panamera S E-Hybrid 94.6
    31 e6 93.4
    32 e6 92.9
    33 Panamera S E-Hybrid 91.6
    34 e6 90.2
    35 e6 89
    36 PRIUS c 75
    37 PRIUS Plug-in Hybrid 72.5
    38 PRIUS 72.4
    39 PRIUS 72.4
    40 Tucson Fuel Cell 71.9
    41 PRIUS 71.8
    42 ACCORD HYBRID 71.5
    43 PRIUS c 71.4
    44 PRIUS c 71.4
    45 PRIUS Plug-in Hybrid 70.6
    46 ACCORD HYBRID 70.4
    47 PRIUS 70.2

    Source: Test Car List Data Files | Cars and Light Trucks | US EPA
    Use 2015 data.

    Sad history, PNGV turns out to be not that hard . . . if you don't crush your EV1s and patent-squish the batteries.


    Bob Wilson
     
    #32 bwilson4web, Dec 29, 2015
    Last edited: Dec 30, 2015
  13. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    Where do these mpgs come from? They seem odd.
     
  14. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Perhaps CAFE unadjusted dyno mpg?

    Even if they are, there are mix ups of fuel economy and gas consumption.
     
  15. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    They appear to be cafe numbers other than the i8, and I have no idea what is going on with that number.

    PNGV's 80 mpg was epa not cafe.
    Compare Side-by-Side


    The best we did was insight, 65 mpg. You need a bev with much better than year 2000 battery tech to get to 80.

    That insight was too small though its taken until now with the gen IV prius eco to crack that 53 mpg on current epa of the insight.
     
  16. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    These are the EPA numbers used for CAFE calculations from 2015. It also comes with the raw metrics which is what I prefer to deal with: Test Car List Data Files | Cars and Light Trucks | US EPA

    Give me engineering data from the original standard and I'm good. Everything else is 'cooked' . . . almost Ioniq. <GRINS>

    Bob Wilson
     
  17. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    As I said the PNGV were EPA not cafe ratings from that time. Reminder of what they were at the time they were changed off pngv and replaced with freedom car.

    The Green Brigade - Car Comparison - Car and Driver
    Insight got 65 mpg on the old epa, was much more affordable, but failed space goals. That insight was the champ on that old test until perhaps the gen IV prius eco (perhaps we will get numbers) or the gen II clarity with the changed freedom car rules.

    Some of the big problems sited for PNGV failure not only were the too high of goals, and not including the goal to meet epa emissions, lack of requirements to actually sell the cars to get the money, etc. Also sited was leaving out the battery consortium. And no the i3 or leaf couldn't have met the goal these were supposed to have easy refueling and range. Something like the 2013 ford fusion energi is very close, but again batteries were left off, and I have no idea how they would have scored it.

    In 2006 DOE looked at the much more successful program that brought out the prius and insight from honda. That is the much more successful plug-in program we have today. We are around 400,000 plug-ins in the US under this program, and other governments also helped with over 1M world wide. That is good results for only 9 years.
     
  18. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Please stop spreading incorrect information.

    Per this source, 80 MPG was set to triple the 1994 sedan MPG. According to DOT, it averaged 27.5 MPG which was the unadjusted CAFE MPG.
     
  19. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    The reason I use Test Car List Data Files | Cars and Light Trucks | US EPA is it traces back to 1984 and the original tests that are still used today. What I'm aware of are:
    • raw metrics from the standard EPA tests and the same CAFE calculations as before
    • Monroney sticker metrics which uses five tests and a weighting with an 'engineering adjustment'
    Even the EPA has "CAFE, labeling and Gas Guzzler" of which CAFE comes from the table cited earlier and Monroney is the window page. If there is something else, I'm not aware of it. Perhaps a source?

    Of which the Wiki provides a lot of insight:

    The Partnership for a New Generation of Vehicles was a cooperative research program between the U.S. government and major auto corporations, aimed at bringing extremely fuel-efficient (up to 80 mpg) vehicles to market by 2003. The partnership, formed in 1993, involved 8 federal agencies,[1] the national laboratories, universities, and the United States Council for Automotive Research (USCAR), which comprises DaimlerChrysler, Ford Motor Company and General Motors Corporation. On track to achieving its objectives, the program was cancelled by the Bush Administration in 2001 at the request of the automakers, with some of its aspects shifted to the much more distant FreedomCAR program.

    Now I took a quick look at the Car and Driver, May 2001 article:
    It is like reading 'its too hard' by someone criticizing Kennedy's decision to go to the moon or our WW-II efforts or the Cold War. I fully agree the USA automakers decided it was too hard and got the program killed for fool-cells. In effect, abandoning the market to Honda, Toyota, and even Ford who apparently "didn't get the memo." Ford, the only USA company that did not go broke eight years later.

    So we'll have to agree to disagree about PNGV versus the 'freedom fool-cell' program. Personally, it set two USA car makers back a full decade and I've long suspected it was done for personal pique since there was (is) no evidence that fool-cells make any more sense today than they did in 2001.

    So this afternoon, I'll get ~51 MPG (it is in the 40s) driving our Toyota Prius around town. If someone finds a way to convert 'freedom car' press releases into gasoline, I'll burn it and finally get some good from the program.

    Bob Wilson.
     
  20. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    In the interest of full disclosure, Ford nearly went broke a couple of years prior, but the banks weren't as tight fisted in extending credit back then. They actually mortgaged their trade mark.