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Which LRR's have the least rolling resistance?

Discussion in 'Gen 4 Prius Fuel Economy' started by Davsup, Nov 23, 2018.

  1. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    It's not just the natural decrease of efficiency in cold weather: the car is monitoring outside temp, and it adjusts warm-up behavior based on what it reads, coupled with how you've set cabin heating/ventilating controls. On a cold morning, if you've set the cabin temperature high, it's for sure going to keep the engine running a lot longer during warm-up.
     
  2. JosephG

    JosephG Active Member

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    Somebody here created a spreadsheet where they were collecting data on fuel efficiency and complaints for several LRR tires, but it seems to be gone now.
     
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  3. alanclarkeau

    alanclarkeau Senior Member

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    If I end up keeping mine past warranty (next June), I'll get mine replaced with Performance Tyres, forget about LLR.
     
  4. JosephG

    JosephG Active Member

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    These days even more performance-oriented tires have lower rolling resistance, but I've been very pleased with the stock tires on my Prius. They've handled very nicely in the rain and dry. I guess it's probably TNGA and not the tires and sticky tires would make it handle even better, but I can't imagine I'd want anything more considering it's not exactly a fast car.
     
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  5. ekpolk

    ekpolk What could possibly...

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    I don't have an answer to your specific question, but this one datum point may offer some insight: the tires you installed, the Bridgstone Ecopia 422+ are the OEM tires on my 2018, which I've had for two weeks now. I am definitely not having a mileage problem in any respect. Of course, my single-car, single-driver example won't allow any firm conclusions, but it would certainly tend to suggest your issue is not with the make-model of tire itself.

    Of course, figuring out something like this can be an absolute nightmare. Maybe you got one or two individual bad tires. Maybe the installer inadvertently knocked the car out of alignment. Maybe, maybe, maybe... Good luck with it.

    Oh yeah, I just noticed the original post date. Any further insights gained since then?
     
  6. padroo

    padroo Senior Member

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    Someone with time, money and knowhow could give you the answer for the very best low rolling resistance tire by setting it up in a lab and run them and measure the resistance electronically by the amount of power it takes to run the tire over a long distance. I have never heard of this type of testing being done by independent testing. Running them on the car creates too many variables. I'm sure the manufacturer has exact data but I doubt they will share it.
     
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