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Prius Prime Plus in my hands

Discussion in 'Prime Main Forum (2017-2022)' started by bwilson4web, Jan 19, 2017.

  1. EV-ish

    EV-ish Active Member

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    Understood, but if FC is increasing the time the ICE is on then it seems fair to chalk up that energy debit to FC.
     
  2. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    To keep vehicle overhead as constant as possible.

    Bob Wilson
     
  3. Lee Jay

    Lee Jay Senior Member

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    I don't see that.

    In one case, you're using power to move the vehicle, in the other case you're using power and not moving the vehicle.

    Either keep speed constant, or measure it the way someone would actually use it when it's stationary - in Park.
     
  4. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Upon further reflection, I do not see a reason for 'rolling test' and would suggest the proponents 'get their hands dirty'.

    I have a metric for car in "D" and 'charge mode.' If in motion, there will be a vechicle drag loss that I have already plotted on mph vs MPG. But my interest is in the gasoline cost to raise the SOC as an energy reserve, a safety factor. At worst, using the vehicle overhead to calculate the SOC burn means the calculate distance on the remaining gas will be slightly higher.

    Any error is in my favor for safety and range. This is a hard concept to understand so I'll work on a graphic. Because I 'see numbers', sometimes I write in 'Bob' which can seem obtuse.

    Bob Wilson
     
  5. Lee Jay

    Lee Jay Senior Member

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    I'm itching to "get my hands dirty", but I still don't have the car I ordered in November!
     
  6. Since2002

    Since2002 Senior Lurker

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    In my Gen 2 if I am stopped at a light in D, if I only maintain enough pressure on the brake to keep the car from moving, I notice on my ScanGauge a slow decrease in SOC, maybe 1% per minute. But if I hold down pretty firmly on the brake, the decrease stops and SOC holds steady. Which makes me think there is a threshold of brake pressure, or more likely brake pedal position, at which the computer cuts off the torque. I haven't tried with just using the parking brake, or with just pressing against a curb, if my theory is right about the computer looking only at brake pedal position, SOC loss might be higher in those cases, but I would have to test to find out.
     
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  7. giora

    giora Senior Member

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    "Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle" (not the one from 'Breaking Bad'):p
     
  8. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    So I converted my benchmark fuel burn to gallons per hour. I then added it to my earlier Prime mph vs MPG and plotted both curves:
    mph MPG MPG+charge
    1 5 59.7 8.6
    2 7 75.7 11.8
    3 9 88.2 14.9
    4 11 97.7 18.0
    5 13 104.7 20.8
    6 15 109.4 23.5
    7 17 112.4 26.1
    8 19 113.9 28.5
    9 21 114.1 30.7
    10 23 113.4 32.7
    11 25 112.0 34.6
    12 27 109.9 36.2
    13 29 107.4 37.7
    14 31 104.6 38.9
    15 33 101.6 40.0
    16 35 98.4 40.9
    17 35 98.4 40.9
    18 37 95.2 41.6
    19 39 91.9 42.2
    20 41 88.7 42.6
    21 43 85.4 42.8
    22 45 82.3 43.0
    23 47 79.2 43.0
    24 49 76.2 42.9
    25 51 73.3 42.7
    26 53 70.6 42.4
    27 55 67.9 42.0
    28 57 65.3 41.5
    29 59 62.9 41.0
    30 61 60.5 40.4
    31 63 58.3 39.9
    32 65 56.1 39.2
    33 67 54.0 38.5
    34 69 52.1 37.8
    35 71 50.2 37.1
    36 73 48.4 36.3
    37 75 46.7 35.6
    38 77 45.1 34.9
    39 79 43.5 34.1
    40 81 42.1 33.4
    41 83 40.6 32.6
    42 85 39.3 31.9
    43 87 38.0 31.2
    44 89 36.8 30.5
    45 91 35.6 29.8
    46 93 34.5 29.1
    47 95 33.4 28.4
    48 97 32.4 27.8
    49 99 31.4 27.1
    50 101 30.4 26.4
    51 103 29.5 25.8
    52 105 28.7 25.2
    53 107 27.8 24.6
    54 109 27.0 24.0
    55 111 26.3 23.5
    56 113 25.5 22.9
    57 115 24.8 22.4

    Unfortunately the outside temperature, 34F, is outside the standard temperature range so I'll have to wait a day or so before running the test. I will have to use my flatter benchmark routes to minimize hill-pumping the charge.

    Bob Wilson
     
    #348 bwilson4web, Mar 12, 2017
    Last edited: Mar 12, 2017
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  9. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    not too shabby at 70 mph.
     
  10. Gen 3 for me

    Gen 3 for me Member

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    Bob,
    I love the way you are making your followers of this thread think with your questions, such as a 1,000 mile tank challenge.

    I have not thought deeply but am guessing you are gathering data for a race between any willing plug-in hybrids and/or BEVs vs a Prius Prime.
    Conditions:
    Start with a full electric charge and if equipped with an ICE one full tank of gas.
    The first vehicle to travel 1000 miles along a designated path or race course with the only re-energization allowed being thru charging the traction battery (no gasoline additions allowed) is the winner.

    I hope you will at least let us know if my guess is on the right track or totally off base to what you are thinking.
     
  11. EV-ish

    EV-ish Active Member

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    No contest if a Tesla is involved with a SuperCharger (SC) available every 100 - 200 miles. I somewhat remember a Model 'S' being able to average around 60-65* mph for unlimited miles on a SC endowed route. A Prime would have to travel under 40 mph the whole way.

    *The arithmetic works out like this, approximately:
    30 minutes for 50 kWh charge
    50 kWh good for 150 miles at 70 - 75 mph
    So about 2.5 hours to travel each 150 mile leg
     
  12. Lee Jay

    Lee Jay Senior Member

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    And no contest the other way if gasoline is involved, as the Prime would need one 3-minute fill-up for the entire trip.
     
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  13. kearsarge

    kearsarge Member

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    Did I miss the conversation on the results? Was this inline with previous early results? at 2k and need to start thinking about fluid changes at 5k...
     
  14. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    It is a dialog, a conversation we might have sitting around a bar or office white board to work up ideas. Hopefully we all learn something and optimize any experiments and refine the data. I do it because I appreciate the feedback from those who understand my posts.

    We need to separate the 1,000 mile tank challenge from 'how to run the tank dry.' The 1,000 mile tank challenge is from a Japanese club of people who see how far they can go on a single tank. I did mine on our Gen-3 Prius in 2013: Efficient driving for a 1,000 mile tank | PriusChat This driving stunt showed it could be done over a three week period by a single driver just by application of what we know about the car.

    Running the tank dry is a safety problem that over the Prius generations has gotten worse. The Gen-1 would display a lot of error messages which meant you had about 1/2 mile to find a safe place to park. Add one gallon of gas and drive off to a gas station. I did that test about 30-40 times.

    The Gen-3 would silently use the traction battery reserve with only one subtle clue . . . the power flow arrows would go away. I did this 7-8 times but again, there was enough remaining traction energy to reach a safe place to park. Add one gallon and the car starts and you drive to a gas station. I did this at the end of my 1,000 mile tank.

    The Prius Prime (Gen-5) gives NO indication the gas is gone unless there is some EV charge. Worse, when the car coasts to a stop, adding one gallon was not enough to start the car. I had to do a 12V, power-on, reset. But knowing its use when running out of gas fully justifies having a 'charge mode.' Put an EV charge on the car when the 'low gas' icon shows up and when it starts to count down, find a safe place to park and add one gallon of gas.

    Yes, some folks follow my musings and occasionally share a chuckle at my occasional bon mot. Hopefully they've come to realize there is neither malice nor morbid voyeurism (although some anonymous moderator(s) may have a different point of view.) I study accidents as 'but for the grace of God.'

    There is an open question of the effect of 'charge mode' on our Prius Prime. I've done one static test and am planning on a moving test. For that test, I'll need a safe way to operate the iPhone camera without having to touch it and risk changing the orientation. As the driver, I want the data, not the risks.

    Bob Wilson
     
  15. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    I did my Gen-3 changes at 5k, 15k, and 25k and the first changes did show machining particles. However, the Prime (Gen-5) did not have the silicon bead particles. There was evidence of silicon leaching in the Gen-5 but this does not 'set my hair on fire.' Particles are a different matter.

    IMHO both the 2k engine and transaxle oil change appears to make sense. Neither the engine nor the transmission appear to be a 'break-in' oil. I'm of the opinion that getting the early, larger particles out will lead to fewer smaller particles and their friction and heat effects in the future.

    Bob Wilson
     
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  16. GasperG

    GasperG Senior Member

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    If I remember correctly Bjorn from Norway averaged around 80 kmh (50 mph) on Model S wit SC in real life. The problem is faster you go, less range you have, I doubt 50 kWh for 150 miles at 70-75 will be enough.
     
  17. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    There is about a 2x factor between the typical EPA range and what can be gotten at the minimum, cruise control speeds: 24 mph Gen-3 and 28 mph Gen-5 (prime). So the EPA range of 595 mile for the Gen-3 means achieving 1,000 miles on one tank is achievable. The 2013 driving stunt was to emphasize the efficient driving is all it takes.

    I would expect a similar range difference in a single-charge, 300 mile, Tesla. But a 3x range in the Tesla would be a challenge. Once an electric car gets into the 500 mile range, achieving 1,000 miles on a single charge becomes practical.

    As for the 640 mi range Prius Prime, it becomes trivial. I'm just waiting for Standard day temperatures, 60-80F, before doing my second one.

    Bob Wilson
     
    #357 bwilson4web, Mar 13, 2017
    Last edited: Mar 13, 2017
  18. Prodigyplace

    Prodigyplace Senior Member

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    Is the Prime now considered Gen 5 or is that a typo? I believe you once considered it Gen 4.5.
     
  19. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    I did but upon getting more 'seat time,' I'm leaning towards Gen-5. The flywheel, one-way clutch is the primary reason but around town, I'm seeing what should be impossible mileage even in cool weather. Like the BMW i3-REx, it is teaching me bad habits for example:
    [​IMG]
    Both the BMW i3-REx and the Prius Prime have led me to using the 'Gas Echo' route with the time savings while achieving better than Gen-1 mileage. This is truly remarkable . . . not that I'm learning bad gasser habits . . . but I can do it with better than Gen-1 and Gen-3 mileage.

    I've always driven on cruise control but this past week, I'm starting to move towards using "Normal" mode from "ECO." This makes it much easier in traffic with fewer gaps in traffic. I'm not sure about "Power" mode as it seems a little fidgety. I prefer a smooth ride and certainly "ECO" smooths things out although sometimes the gap can get so large the speed difference requires gentle use of my foot brake.

    Engine warm-up had been the bane of the Gen-1 and Gen-3 Prius. But someone took a shinai to the warm-up control laws and beat them into submission.

    A lot of these things I didn't see during my initial benchmarks but this car is really well polished. Understand I skipped the 2016 Gen-4 Prius because someone forgot TSS-P for the Level 2 ECO.

    I once read an article about computer products that claimed generations:
    1. Got the big things right but a lot of nagging, bugs, 2001-03 Prius, Gen-1
    2. Fixes many of the nagging bugs but introduces others, 2010-15 Prius, Gen-3
    3. Finally gets everything right, the Prime, 2017-current, Gen-5
    This is not a slight against the Gen-4 Prius as much as the first model year was badly mixed. Make the one-way clutch standard and a little more capacity in the traction battery and it will be a star.

    Bob Wilson
     
    #359 bwilson4web, Mar 13, 2017
    Last edited: Mar 13, 2017
  20. bhtooefr

    bhtooefr Senior Member

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    Well, if the battery can't output more than 37 kW (and I suspect it's well under that in practice on the current Liftback), then the one-way clutch is unnecessary...