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Prius Prime to the Rav4 Prime

Discussion in 'Prime Main Forum (2017-2022)' started by PixelRogue, Mar 18, 2021.

  1. PixelRogue

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    I remained hopeful Toulyota would make a crossover suv version of the Prius..eventually they made the vehicles but not as a Prius.

    curious if anyone has comparison data (beyond dealer spec sheets) of the 2020/2021 Prius Orime to that of the RAV4 Prime? Website is stating 44 mpge on electric only...
     
  2. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Leaves me confused; what are the two electric-only ranges?
     
  3. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    What do you want to compare?

    and it's 94mpge.

    Prius Prime vs. RAV4 Prime
    Gross battery capacity: 8.8kWh vs. 18.1kWh
    EV Range: 25 miles vs 42 miles
    AC Charger: 3.3kW vs 3.3kW (opt. 6.6kW on RAV4 Prime XSE)
    Level 2 Charge Time: 2h10m vs. 4.5hr (2.5hr with 6.6kW)
    Level 1 Charge Time: 5.5hr vs. 12hr
    MPGe in EV Mode: 133 vs. 94 (combined)
    MPG in HV mode: 54 vs. 38 (combined)
    Price: $28,220 vs. $38,100
    Fed Tax Credit: $4,502 vs. $7,500
     
    1x1, PixelRogue, fotomoto and 9 others like this.
  4. farmecologist

    farmecologist Senior Member

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    Yikes..the RAV4 is only 38 in HV mode? That would be hard to swallow for me coming from a Gen3 or Prime.
     
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  5. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    True. But anyone else, it's dang good fuel economy for a 302hp car.

    And likely, based on what I've noticed with any current gen Toyota hybrid, it's underrated. I've seen journalists get over 50mpg in the regular RAV4 Hybrid so I suspect the Prime will get higher real world mpg as well.
     
  6. farmecologist

    farmecologist Senior Member

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    It's kind of like people stating the Prius v (wagon) fuel efficiency comes close to the Gen3. However, in reality, that just isn't true. It's physics...the v is just a larger, heavier vehicle compared to the liftback. Fuelly spells this out pretty well. I'm sure the same will hold true, on average, for the Prius Prime vs the Rav4 Prime.

    Also, I'm not sure I like the emphasis on HP for hybrids...but I guess I'm old school. However, if the HP 'feature' converts some diehard ICE folks, that's ok with me! (y)
     
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  7. rdgrimes

    rdgrimes Senior Member

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    The Rav4 Prime has those really cool paddle shifters that make it go faster.
     
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  8. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Well both the Gen 4 and the Prime have been beating EPA estimates for us. It’s much easier than on the Gen 3.

    The Gen 4 is more willing to go into EV mode and will do so more often.

    Yeah that’s true. And anecdotally, it’s been creating buzz among people I know that aren’t “car people” so it’s working.
     
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  9. bluespruce

    bluespruce Member

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    The Rav4 Prime look appealing but you can't get them. And when you do there will be other choices that also look good. Its getting very competitive for auto makers.
     
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  10. farmecologist

    farmecologist Senior Member

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    Yeah..I understand. I have no doubts that both can beat estimates if driven properly. However, the implication is that the Rav4 Prime could 'come close' to the Prius Prime in HV mode. Frankly, 38MPG is pretty darn poor in HV mode...I was expecting better. However, it does absolutely make sense. Like you said...the RAV4 Prime is a bigger vehicle that seems tuned for 'horsepower'. Like I said...I don't like that...but if it puts butts in the seats...so be it. (y)

    I'm coming from a place where I own a Gen3 liftback and a Prius v (wagon) and I drive both on the same roads and in the same conditions, etc...I can 'feel' the difference in the weight. There is no way the v is going to be more efficient on average than the liftback. However, some people have debated that here on PriusChat. :whistle: This just makes me naturally skeptical when I hear claims that are FAR above the EPA estimates...In the real world, it just doesn't hold water.

    Edit: The above is another reason why I'm a bit miffed that Toyota won't release the Yaris Cross in the USA. I would have liked to see how the base hybrid Cross would do. I won't even mention a Yaris Cross Prime..that is apparently far too much to ask for. (y)
     
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  11. chickenhawk

    chickenhawk Member

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    Its a sweet looking car:cool:
    [​IMG]
     
  12. chickenhawk

    chickenhawk Member

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  13. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    The biggest difference between 2021 PP and RP is the price tag.

    Prius Prime $28,220 Starting MSRP
    Rav4 Prime $38,100 Starting MSRP

    Add $5,000 cashback for PP but none for RP, even with larger $7,500 tax credit for RP, the price difference is huge. For someone who can not utilize the full tax credit, the difference is even larger.

    Prius Prime $18,720 based on starting MSRP ($28,220 Starting MSRP -$5K rebate -$4.5K tax credit)
    Rav4 Prime $30,600 based on starting MSRP ($38,100 Starting MSRP-$7.5K tax credit)

    They are not in the same category of classes to be compared.
     
    #13 Salamander_King, Mar 19, 2021
    Last edited: Mar 19, 2021
  14. MikeDee

    MikeDee Senior Member

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    Why does one need that much power in a vehicle like that? Someone mentioned the weight, but the aerodynamics probably aren't that good as well.
     
  15. Db17

    Db17 Member

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    I was thinking about getting one. But in my case in Calif there was another $3k in State and APCD rebates and $18k trade-in for my 2017PP made a new PP almost free. On top of that every dealer I could find that had the Rav available was adding $5k as a premium.
     
  16. fuzzy1

    fuzzy1 Senior Member

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    It looked to me that it was built to be reasonably well powered in both EV mode and ICE mode. And the architecture ended up allowing it to nearly add those two mode powers together.
     
  17. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    And towing capability.
     
  18. john1701a

    john1701a Prius Guru

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    That much power makes it easy to slip in a product with less. A smaller crossover hybrid with a plug...
     
  19. ramolnar

    ramolnar Junior Member

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    I disagree for two reasons.
    1) Comparing Limited trims is much closer. Rav4 Prime is $41,425 - 7500 credit = 33,925, while Prius Prime is $34,000 - 4500 = 29,500. Under $5000 is close enough, and not every state has rebates. Also, to get Blind Spot monitoring you need a Prius Prime limited but only a Rav4 Prime base. That's under $2000 difference.
    In a model where one sells after 3 years, the difference between Prius Prime Limited and Rav4 Prime Limited is about $6000 - $5000 of that is the buy-in-Maryland rebate. An Oklahoma Prius Prime limited at MSRP has slightly higher 3-year cost than a Rav4 Prime base.

    2) Some people have wide spreads. We compared HEV and PHEV sedans and small SUVs, from the Prius Prime LE and Ioniq PHEV up through the BMW 330e and Volvo S60 T8, MSRP from $25,000 to $52,000. The Rav4 Prime was on the list.
     
  20. Salamander_King

    Salamander_King Senior Member

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    Maybe true for your state. However, since not everyone qualifies for a $7500 tax credit, in most cases, the real price difference between PP and RP is still huge IMHO. If someone value-oriented is shopping for a new car at a sub $20K total cost, then Rav4 Prime will not be on his/her shopping list.
     
    #20 Salamander_King, Mar 20, 2021
    Last edited: Mar 20, 2021