I'd have to drag a 300lb anchor behind my BMW 335d to simulate the performance of your Prius. Oh, yeah it's a diesel BMW, that gets 43mpg. HS
- all speed limits in the USA are well below the top speed of a Prius.
- unless you are the lead dog at the red light, you get to the next one no faster than the car in front of you. If you are the lead dog, you can wait at the next red light for all the "non performance" drivers to roll up behind you.
- non scientific "research" shows the 0 to 35 time from a red light is 8 - 10 seconds no matter what you are driving, unless you are the lead dog. Not a problem for a Prius. In fact, since the Prius ALWAYS starts moving on the electric motor, it is 100% torque from second 0.01. Not the slug people presume. And no lag for up-shifts because without stepped gears, it doesn't shift.
- the price of a Prius would buy little more than half of a 335d. Heck for the price of a 335d AND a Prius, I could buy a Tesla Model S
And that 43 MPG - over all or highway only? Given the EPA highway is only 36, I'm guessing highway and you are doing well above the EPA. What does it get "city" and I will assume NOT "performance" driving so it comes out better for your argument for the 335d. EPA is 23 MPG. I would be quite unhappy if I averaged 43 MPG let alone got that only on the highway. My 2009 has NEVER been that bad and the 2004 only 3 times.
To each his own but if you take a realistic look at how long it takes to get from A to B in the 335d or a Prius, it is 99.9% the same. Hot rodding off a red, weaving in traffic, hitting the brakes at the next red get you: nowhere but a wait at the next red light. "Performance" matters on a race track, specifically LeMans style. Matters not a wit for normal driving. Which then brings it down to "fun to drive". For that you are supposed to buy a Mini with "go kart like handling".
