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Prius Plug-in Versus Volt: Which Costs Less to Drive?

Discussion in 'Gen 1 Prius Plug-in 2012-2015' started by usbseawolf2000, Oct 20, 2011.

  1. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    PluginCars posted this article without details of the cost of fuel and the calculation. The graph is also confusing because it started out with 15 miles interval and then jumped to 30 miles interval. That interval change in X-axis created an illusion of an inflection points at 30 miles mark.

    So I decided to create my own graph. The spreadsheet with the formulas are available here if anyone wants to review.

    For the graph below, I am using national average price of electricity and gas. The assumption that only one recharge was made. If you do multiple recharges for every 15 miles, PiP will have an edge.

    Column 1
    0 Electricity $0.11 per kWh
    1 Regular Gas $3.5 per gallon
    2 Premium Gas $3.8 per gallon
    3
    4 PiP kWh 3.6 kWh per charge
    5 Volt kWh 12.9 kWh per charge
    6
    7 PiP MPG 49
    8 Volt MPG 37


    [​IMG]


    For the graph below, I am keeping the price of the electricity at 11 cents per kWh and I increased the gas price to $4.5 for regular and $5 for premium.

    [​IMG]


    For the graph below, I kept the gas prices the same as the first graph. The price of the electricity is increased to 19 cents per kWh.
    [​IMG]
     

    Attached Files:

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  2. Roadburner440

    Roadburner440 Member

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    USB if it helps at all I would adjust the volts kwh down from 12 to just a tad over 10 to maybe 10.5 (that is what I have observed to be usable), and I would also adjust the fuel mileage down to the low 30's.. I personally have seen 28-32mpg motoring about town. That is from my own personal observation, and hopefully it will give you some real world data instead of their best case scenario numbers. Granted the actual range is somewhat more than indicated, but it is about to go down into the 30's for the winter. That article also backs up my previous observation I made in another thread that it only takes about 70 miles to make the Prius a better option. I assume it will be less for the PiP seeing as my own 70 mile figure is based on our 2011 Prius which we regularly achieve 51-54mpg in and is not a PiP. I think the PiP cost will wind up being lower than what the graphs even show since we already know all the tips/tricks to getting good mileage around here, so will be interesting to see what the real world numbers for the PiP look like when people start getting them.

    [​IMG]
    Taken after fully draining the battery from a full charge in 1 drive. Is why I doubt the 12.9kwh hour estimate. That would give me another approx 7-10 miles of range, and I would greatly appreciate that.
     
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  3. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    The point is to illustrate overall consumption, including the overhead of the charging process itself. So, you want more than just usable listed.
    .
     
  4. Roadburner440

    Roadburner440 Member

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    True John.. I really need to get one of those meters to plug the charger into to see what the draw is for the charge and battery conditioning.. I keep forgetting about that. I pay a flat rate for the garage at the moment that has its own seperate electric so not really sure what the overall draw of the car is personally. Will certaintly be finding out next month though. Doing a little more digging USB's original figure is correct, so I apologize. I do sometimes forget the thing is a tad more complex than say plugging in a cell phone.
     
  5. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Yea, I am using the official EPA figures to compare. When we have PiP's EPA numbers, I will update the graphs. Right now, we only have the info from the production announcement and data from the prototype.
     
  6. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    EV'rs can tell you that as a general rule, there's about 10% loss going from AC wall power, to DC battery charging, to storing the juice. Example from personal experience; although I'm calculating out 5.5 miles per kWh, I'm actually at 5.0 miles per kWh at the wall. Exactly 10% loss.
     
  7. Corwyn

    Corwyn Energy Curmudgeon

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    What are you using for miles per kiloWatt-hour?
     
  8. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    A Fluke, and the Leaf's odometer. Pretty straight forward.
     
  9. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    If you take account of the gas price difference between regular and premium like in my graph, the crossing point is the 50 mile mark.
     
  10. gwmort

    gwmort Active Member

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    Why is the prius cheaper to run in CD at 87 mpge than the Volt at 94 mpge?
     
  11. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    You are using the following assumptions to generate your chart:
    15 / 3.6 kWh = 4.17 miles per kWh
    35 / 12.9 kWh = 2.71 miles per kWh

    Yet, at the Frankfurt auto show a few weeks ago Toyota itself gave a preliminary estimated battery range of 23 km or 14.3 miles on the European test cycle (NEDC). We have published NEDC results for the Opel Ampera (Chevy Volt with minor exterior cosmetic changes). It got 83 km or 51.6 miles of estimated battery range.

    14.3 / 3.6 kWh = 3.97 miles per kWh
    51.6 / 12.9 kWh = 4.0 miles per kWh

    In other words, the Volt and PiP are identically efficient on the European test cycle. So, you can adjust things by taking the Volt's EPA computed miles per kWh from above (2.71) and use it for the PiP.

    2.71 * 3.6 kWh = 9.75 miles

    The chart should use 10 miles for the PiP, not 15.

    That, together with a consistent EV range cost slope would push the crossover point to at least 60 miles or so. A skilled Volt driver going to a destination 60 miles away would use "Mountain Mode" as a crude battery "hold" button to preserve approximately 15 miles of battery driving near the eventual destination. I always drive this way on 50+ mile highway trips.

    The result is that the gasoline is used during highway driving. So I would argue that a more realistic chart would use the EPA highway estimate of 40 mpg for the Volt.

    This would move the crossover point even farther.
     
  12. gwmort

    gwmort Active Member

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    I think the other problem is not accounting for the oil consumption/cost during the "EV-esque" range of the PIP. It is blended operation so in addition to the kwh cost over the 15 miles he also needs to include the gas cost (I'd say about 35 cents [1/10 of a gallon or 150 mpg oil consumption in "EV-esque"]).
     
  13. sub3marathonman

    sub3marathonman Active Member

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    From that data, the Volt went at 240 watt-hr/mile. Which seems pretty good in my opinion. From what I've seen at low speed with the Hymotion kit on the Prius it is about 230 watt-hr/mile. So they both do come out pretty close when going on electric. I thought the Volt would do a fair bit worse than the Prius, but apparently not.
     
  14. SageBrush

    SageBrush Senior Member

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    I am very skeptical of the volt managing to come anywhere close to the PIP in city CD fuel economy, given the weight differences.

    As for the overall question, a smart PIP driver is going to embarrass the volt in cold weather driving
     
  15. gwmort

    gwmort Active Member

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    I'm jealous, my 2011 doesn't display the kwh used...
     
  16. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Thanks for the input. I think it makes sense and fair. On Toyota site, it does say EV range is 10 to 15 miles depending on conditions.

    PiP would have an EV<>HV button to hold the charge as well. It is more flexible than Volt's mountain mode since there is no preset SOC. That'll allow EV in the city traffic and HV on the highway. The battery will get more miles at lower speed. With the mountain mode, you can't select battery to run at lower speed and use gas at higher speed. We'll have to wait until the realworld data come out for PiP.

    For now, I'll update the graph and see how things come out.

    When the ICE kicks in, the electricity consumption may stop temporarily. We don't know the ratio of the blending. I'll just use 10 miles EV range and 5 miles in HV mode. That may be bias against PiP. We'll see how the official EPA figure come out.
     
  17. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Ok, graphs are updated. The crossing point for graph #1 is now at 55 miles mark.

    Graph#2 crossing point is at 60 miles mark.

    Graph#3 now use 17 cents per kWh.
     
  18. gwmort

    gwmort Active Member

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    5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60
    Prius 0.27 0.45 0.68 1.03 1.38 1.73 2.08 2.43 2.78 3.13 3.48 3.83
    Volt 0.19 0.38 0.57 0.75 0.94 1.13 1.32 1.82 2.32 2.82 3.32 3.82

    I get a cross over point somewhere just past 60 miles (wish I knew how to graph better)
     
  19. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    Raw data for Graph#1:

    Column 1
    0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65
    1 Prius Plugin $0.20 $0.40 $0.75 $1.11 $1.47 $1.82 $2.18 $2.54 $2.90 $3.25 $3.61 $3.97 $4.32
    2 Volt $0.20 $0.41 $0.61 $0.81 $1.01 $1.22 $1.42 $1.93 $2.45 $2.96 $3.47 $3.99 $4.50


    Graph#2:

    Column 1
    0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65
    1 Prius Plugin $0.20 $0.40 $0.86 $1.31 $1.77 $2.23 $2.69 $3.15 $3.61 $4.07 $4.53 $4.99 $5.45
    2 Volt $0.20 $0.41 $0.61 $0.81 $1.01 $1.22 $1.42 $2.09 $2.77 $3.45 $4.12 $4.80 $5.47
     
  20. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    The European Volt/Ampera also gets a "use gas" mode -- for mysterious reasons the U.S. version does not. All Volt's have a Mountain Mode that does act as a fixed function "use gas" mode by holding the last 15 miles of electric range.