Travelover
Elite Member
Oh sure, but it probably had a fully charged battery when you bought it. :laughing:While the mpg debate is interesting, I'll just say that my 2010 prius is averaging just over 49mpg for 30K miles. .........
Oh sure, but it probably had a fully charged battery when you bought it. :laughing:While the mpg debate is interesting, I'll just say that my 2010 prius is averaging just over 49mpg for 30K miles. .........
Oh sure, but it probably had a fully charged battery when you bought it. :laughing:
I can see what you are getting at. The test sounds over-engineered to me, or really wrong for these types of vehicles to begin with.
If, like Egon said, you begin with a full charge and end with a full charge, the gas engine in a non-plugin will automatically be penalized when it recharges the battery--has to happen somewhere in the test. You gain some here, lose some there.
So who charged the standard gas engines battery on a non hybrid? It works out to be a crap computation. The comparison should not be made between a hybrid and non-hybrid. Two different animals. They both use gas but one uses it more effeciently. How do they compare Hydrogen or Propane powered vehicles? Compare like vehicles for effeciency and non-like vehicles for scale.
It's not the type fuel, it's how you make mechanical power from it. Converting it from what ever to electricity, then send it down a power line can be as much as 50% inefficient. Stepping the voltage down, then storing it then taking it out of battery looses efficiency each step. The gallon of fuel at the power plant charging cars somewhere else can't by laws of physics produce the same power as burning it directly in a TDi. HSCNG makes more sense to me than hybrids. Ford CNG Vehicles