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Winter driving too cold weather MPG down

Discussion in 'Prime Fuel Economy & EV Range' started by Ed From Syracuse, Jan 1, 2018.

  1. Ed From Syracuse

    Ed From Syracuse Junior Member

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    Today when I got up it was 11 below in Upstate New York. The car was plugged in overnight and before I left for work I pushed the AC button to preheat the car. I did this twice since it only preheats for 10 minutes. When I got into the car to start it the engine came on. At that time it's now 7 below zero. I traveled 13 miles to work and I couldn't get the vehicle to go into EV. Even when I turned off the heat the ICE still ran. My estimated MPG was 43 miles per gallon. 3 hours before I left work I plugged it in. I hit the AC button before I left to preheat the car. When I proceeded to drive the car was completely on ev mode the temperature outside the car was 17 degrees. Can anyone tell me why the engine kept running when I was driving and didn't go in EV mode when the temp was below 0 degrees?
     
  2. DavidA

    DavidA Prius owner since July 2009

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    It isn't supposed to work in EV mode at 0 degrees. At about 14 degrees, or below, the car automatically disregards EV and favors gas, for a variety of reasons. There are some exceptions, such as leaving the car plugged in with battery pre-heating. But that fails too once you're out there driving for a while.

    We must have at least 10 threads on this now in the main Prime forum. Please read those. Hundreds of posts with answers. This is also covered in your owner's manual.
     
  3. Ed From Syracuse

    Ed From Syracuse Junior Member

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    Thanks, I kind of figured that out but I just wanted to know why. Since the engine doesn't heat the car is it just to assist the battery? I'll search for the answer on threads.
     
  4. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Below 14°F/-10°C, the vapour-injected heat pump doesn't provide enough heat. Also, Toyota engineers figured it was more efficient to run the engine to generate heat for the cabin.

    If you're in EV mode, the battery is probably powering the car but the engine is running to provide heat. Honestly at those temps, I'd run in HV mode. If the engine is running, might as well use it for propulsion too (and it could help with mpg since you'll be revving the engine as you accelerate rather than have the engine simply idling for heat while the battery supplies the power to the electric motor. I hope that made sense).
     
  5. Flaming

    Flaming Active Member

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    in regards of post #1 , No matter what happen the car control everything ;)

    -25C this morning , battery full 100% , and the car has started the engine immediately ( no front defrost activated ). On my 20 Km trip , the EV mode light was on but the car worked in hybrid mode ( engine + electric ) , cabin temp was set at Eco 18 C + heated seat +steering wheel. I observed the energy monitor and Half way on my trip the engine started to cut-off on downhills , maybe 4Km of the trip was pure EV ( no red lines at all ) i arrived at my destination with 85% battery left. NOTE : the car was plugged all night and the battery was already full but the battery heater worked 100% of the time because my Level 2 charger light was '' green '' meaning that the car was pumping some ''juice''.

    -25.jpg
     
  6. Old Bear

    Old Bear Senior Member

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    Happy New Year! Boston has now had its longest stretch of sub-20-degree days since they started keeping records back in 1872.

    I've decided that letting the engine run to heat the cabin is a better alternative to hypothermia and frostbite.

    But I notice from the Prime's charging system display that the when the engine comes on in EV mode, the graphic shows energy flowing from the engine to the traction battery and the traction battery then both powering the climate-control heat pump and providing propulsion to the front wheels. When coasting downhill, the display is a virtual riot of red, yellow and green energy flowing every which-way.

    Throughout all this, the EV symbol remains lighted -- not the HV symbol.

    I know there Prime has a fancy mechanical transmission that allows the gas engine to work with the electric traction motor in HV mode, but I am wondering if when the engine runs in EV mode, the Prime's gas engine functions more like the diesel engine of a diesel-electric locomotive. In the locomotive, the diesel engine powers a generator which in turn provides electricity to the traction motors. In the Prime, does the gas engine in EV mode similarly serve to charge the traction battery?

    Possibly someone more knowledgeable can provide better insight into how various systems interact when the Prime's engine is running just to provide cabin heat.
     
  7. huskers

    huskers Senior Member

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    Been -17 and -15 the last two mornings here. I did not drive far but got 44 mpg and 36 mpg on both trips. That means the ICE is going to come on no matter what. I actually wanted it on to warm up the engine. Sucks but this extreme weather will not last forever.
     
  8. bat4255

    bat4255 2017 Prius v #2 and 2008 Gen II #2

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    The winters in the Midwest are one reason I would not buy an all electric vehicle. In this weather I want backup from the cold.
     
    #8 bat4255, Jan 2, 2018
    Last edited: Jan 2, 2018
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  9. Whiteyprius

    Whiteyprius Active Member

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    I am not the expert, but a couple of things I understand are happening to keep the ICE running. First the regen battery needs heat to run most efficiently, and #2, the catalytic converter must be at a certain temp to be most effective. Remember, the Prius philosophy is low emissions first, then high mpg's.

    Posted via the PriusChat mobile app.
     
  10. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Happy New Year!


    Judging by how you guys are describing it, it does sound like it's operating in "serial-hybrid mode" when you're in EV mode while the engine is idling, providing heat and with arrows flowing from engine to battery.

    Sounds like in really cold temperatures, it can still be beneficial to have an engine block heater.
     
  11. bat4255

    bat4255 2017 Prius v #2 and 2008 Gen II #2

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    Put one on right away on our '08, as it was my wife's work car. (mail carrier 6 days a week). Our '16 does not have one, as we are now both retired. When the weather is this crappy, we just stay home :)
     
    #11 bat4255, Jan 2, 2018
    Last edited: Jan 2, 2018
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  12. Ed From Syracuse

    Ed From Syracuse Junior Member

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    Thanks, I've been putting in a HV mode during the start-up and when the car warms up enough I switch it to EV mode
     
  13. Oniki

    Oniki Active Member

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    Err ... why ?

    One general idea behind efficient cold weather driving is to heat up the ICE once ... and only once. And to keep the ICE warm throughout the drive. I've been doing better now that I have an engine coolant temperature monitor via my smartphone app.
     
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  14. Oniki

    Oniki Active Member

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    Warmer today, 42F returning home and about the same on the way to work.
    Total 0.89 Gasoline used for the 89 mile commute (and one full ~ 6.3 kWh battery charge, courtesy of my home PV.)

    100 mpg again :)
     
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  15. huskers

    huskers Senior Member

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    50 degrees here today but we are getting slammed tonight. Ice, then snow, then blizzard winds and back to sub zero days. I'm going to stay home with Prime in the garage nice and warm.
     
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  16. fneil

    fneil Member

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    Which app are you using?
     
  17. Oniki

    Oniki Active Member

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    Torque
     
  18. Ed From Syracuse

    Ed From Syracuse Junior Member

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    Just an update on my fuel mileage. I found out that the engine will run when it is 13 degrees or less out. The engine runs in the hybrid mode. Found out that when the temperature in the minus degrees I'm getting about anywhere between 40 to 45 degrees depending on how I'm driving. At times it does go to EV mode. A first I thought the engine wasn't heating the car but I was wrong. The heat pump will not work when temperatures are 13 degrees and under. When the temperature is above 13 degrees I preheat the car using the AC button. I do this every 10 minutes for about 30 minutes before I leave. I found out that the AC mode on the last for 10 minutes. And this gives me time for my car to charge up. Just have to know your temperatures outside and how the drive the car and those cold weather conditions. Also on another matter I found out that and it's summer time I was getting anywhere between 33 to 35 eMPG on a full charge. Now I I get 25 or less on a full charge.
     

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  19. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    Minnesota Prime driving...

     
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  20. E-GINO

    E-GINO Active Member

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    Question is: in such cold weather conditions, MPG wise would it better to switch in HV mode immediately after start of the car, or let HSD to manage the available sources of energy as it prefere?

    I am asking because there is (or there should be) a substantial difference between HV mode, and "fake" EV mode: at costant speed in HV mode, ICE and MG2 basically spin the wheels, while MG1 basically starts ICE and (if necessary) charge the traction battery propelled by ICE.

    In EV "fake" mode, with a full traction battery, I reckon that MG1 and MG2 spin the wheels, while ICE idles just to warm the coolant and the cabin. Which looks like a waste of energy...