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Gen 5 Prius (possible in 2021) will we possibly see 60mpg?

Discussion in 'Gen 4 Prius Main Forum' started by TNeil, May 12, 2019.

  1. tucatz

    tucatz Active Member

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    My bet is that Toyota won’t introduce a new Prius until something entirely different is ready
     
  2. TinyTim

    TinyTim Active Member

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    They are the science of weights and measures. I ran my tank down to empty and then some. Put a full tank of gas in the engine and loaned by Prius out to someone who has never driven a Prius. He came back 160 miles later. The trip computer showed 57.8 MPG. The driver doesn't know the mileage tricks or how to hyper mile. I rest my case.
     
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  3. HerbMPG

    HerbMPG Junior Member

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    The previous owner of my 2016 loaded pkg 4 averaged 62mpg! Not sure how they did that. Maybe driving a lot of highway miles at 65-70 mph? I’m getting 51-54, but have achieved 60 for a few hundred miles.
     
  4. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    More likely lower speed driving, around town.
     
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  5. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Yeah lower speeds. 65-70mph will net closer to 53-55mpg, not 62mpg.
     
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  6. Richard2005

    Richard2005 Member

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    Well the new Aqua (Japanese version of Prius C) model press release talks about a new Bipolar NiMH battery. The new Aqua is rated at 35.8 km/l on Japanese WLTC cycle, however this is on the old NiMH battery and they have not published any figures on the efficiency of the other Aqua versions that have the the new Bipolar battery.

    However the new Bipolar NiMH battery has 2 times the output (I'm assuming power) of the existing NiMH battery. I think the main advantage of this will be the ability to increase the electric power to somewhere similar to the RAV4 Prime. In other words Toyota hybrids could get a significant power boost without the cost of a larger PHEV Li-Ion battery.

    It looks like the Aqua is a test mule for this new battery and I hope Toyota put it into the next Gen 5 Prius to give it greater performance (what people want these days) as well as a 15% efficiency improvement.
     
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  7. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    For anyone still on a gen 2 or 3, the amount of EV driving on a Gen 4 is quite impressive. No need to fiddle with the throttle or trick it into EV mode - once it’s warm and throttle input is light, the engine is off.

    I’d rather have a more energy dense battery than a more powerful battery for the Prius but I suppose if the battery can supply more power, then maybe the engine can be detuned further or downsized back to 1.5 litres.

    Or maybe Toyota will finally give the Prius some oomph. With the Yaris gone, the Prius is now the slowest car in the lineup. A regular gas Corolla will handily beat a Prius lol. (Never mind the new 2022 Civic Turbo)
     
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  8. Richard2005

    Richard2005 Member

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    So the Aqua Bipolar battery has 1.4 times the energy density/capacity .. so EV range would increase assuming they keep the same sized battery. In terms of my Gen 2, its 16 years and on the original battery .. and yes I can confirm the EV range is not great, but it still works as intended.
     
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  9. royrose

    royrose Senior Member

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    bestcarweb.jp has just published an article about the bipolar battery claiming that it will become the standard battery for Toyota hybrids (not plug-ins): (use google translate)

    HVに革命起こす? 新型アクアの世界初搭載バッテリーは次世代の本命か - 自動車情報誌「ベストカー」
     
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  10. farmecologist

    farmecologist Senior Member

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    Nice article. Thanks!

    However, it still pains me reading articles about the Aqua/Pruis C knowing that it won't be available in the USA. (y) I like the redesign a lot!
     
  11. Richard2005

    Richard2005 Member

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    This makes sense because Toyota would not release it in Aqua unless they were confident it would work well and its likely to be ultimately cheaper. I just hope they roll it out other models quickly, such as Prius.