Toyota’s Prius is, famously, a hybrid car. This means it uses an electric
motor as well as a petrol engine to get from A to B. In the Prius, both engine
and motor are able to drive the front wheels, acting either separately or in
concert to get the car moving. In theory, this combination allows the Prius
driver to save money and reduce CO2 output, using less fuel for a given journey.
Hybrids
can be efficient but this is not a given - fuel saving depends a lot on how and
where they are driven, so buyers considering a Prius first need to take a
dispassionate look at their motoring habits.
The Prius will offer the most benefit on journeys where there is plenty of
speeding up and slowing down, or lots of opportunities for coasting. So if most
of your motoring is in a congested city, or on country roads with tight bends,
or in hilly country, the Prius will likely do much better than a conventional
rival. If the majority of your driving is done at constant speed on the
motorway, you might as well buy an ordinary car and not lug around a hybrid’s
heavy batteries.
In our tests, we saw mostly inner-city crawls and medium-pace motorway
driving, and achieved an average of 52 miles per gallon. This falls well short
of the
official
combined-cycle figure of 65.7mpg, but is nonetheless at least 20 per cent
better than most similarly-sized petrol-powered cars could hope for on the same
route. Many diesel cars would equal or beat the Prius’s CO2 emissions, of
course, but in the process would produce much dirtier exhaust gases, which can
worsen other environmental problems.
Toyota
offers the Prius in three different specifications in the UK, called T3, T4
and T Spirit, with on-the-road prices of £17,782, £18,582 and £20,682
respectively.
All three levels come relatively well equipped, with electronic climate
control for example, while the T Spirit boasts a Bluetooth hands-free phone
facility and voice-activated satellite navigation. All variants share the same
official CO2 output figure of 104g/km. That puts the Prius in Band B under both
the current grading system and next year’s expanded VED roster. A tax disc costs
£15 at present, and will cost £20 under the 2009 rules. Company car tax is 10
per cent of purchase price in the 2008/2009 tax year. The Prius is
exempt
from the London Congestion Charge, and will continue to avoid the fee after
the upcoming rule changes, in force from 27 October 2008.
In size terms the Prius slots between the Mondeo and Focus classes - offering
about the same interior space as a Renault Scénic. However, the Prius’s nearest
direct rival is the
Honda
Civic IMA hybrid, which is a four-door saloon rather than a hatchback. The
Honda costs about the same, looks more anonymous, is slightly less spacious
inside, and feels more conventional in use.
Toyota’s complicated hybrid components are covered by an eight-year warranty,
which helps to prop up residual values. About 55 per cent of initial outlay on a
Prius is retained after three years, which is much better than a Renault Scénic
and only slightly worse than a Volkswagen Golf.
For the price the Prius offers good interior space and reasonable comfort, a
quality feel to the interior, and some upmarket touches such as puddle-lights in
the front doors and lined storage spaces. It is not especially luxurious even in
T-Spirit guise, but it is comfortable. It is also not remotely sporty, with
high-set seats and numb-feeling controls helping to keep the mind set firmly on
fuel-saving rather than fast cornering.
So, what is the Prius like to drive?
In
a word, odd. The gear-change, instruments and many of the minor controls operate
in unconventional ways and are found in unexpected places. Optimistic guesswork
was not sufficient to get the Prius moving, for example, and after a few futile
minutes spent prodding buttons, we were forced to break open the owner’s
handbook.
One culprit in our confusion was the electronic automatic transmission,
accessed via a stubby knob on the dashboard. Rather than slotting firmly into a
drive, reverse or neutral position, this lever simply has to be slid momentarily
up, down or across. The requested gear will engage, with a visual reminder on
the dashboard, and on release the knob will simply spring back. This action felt
odd to begin with but we quickly adjusted.
We also got used to the foot-operated “handbrake”, which fortunately is not
needed during hill-starts. Instead the car simply will not roll backwards on a
hill unless the driver selects reverse.
Ventilation, audio, trip computer and sat-nav controls can be reached via a
large, centrally mounted touch-screen. In our T Spirit test car, many functions
could also be controlled using a well-designed set of buttons on the steering
wheel, or through voice commands.
Our test car was fitted with an automated self-parking facility, which will
guide the car into a suitable space selected using the touch-screen and a
rear-facing camera. We liked the camera - it offers a clear rearward view day or
night, overlaid with coloured guide-lines even when reversing manually. The
self-parking process works well enough but is much too fiddly to bother with
unless you are hopeless at parking, however.
In general the car’s computerised controls work effortlessly. Most drivers
will remain unaware that the throttle and brakes, for example, are
drive-by-wire. You press the pedals normally, but the car’s computers decide
what to do with the engine, electric motor, energy regeneration and brakes,
depending on how urgently you use your feet.
Drive is via a continuously variable transmission (CVT), meaning that engine
revs and road speed are largely unrelated. Press the accelerator hard and the
revs will quickly rise and stay at a high level until you ease off again,
allowing the modest 1.5 litre, 76bhp engine to work at its peak output
regardless of speed, assisted by the 67bhp electric motor of course.
At low speed and when setting off, the engine will often not run at all and
the car will drive on electric power alone, to save fuel. Engine combustion also
typically halts the moment you lift off the accelerator, unless the battery
charge is low. Transitions between engine and electric power are largely
unobtrusive but are slightly more noticeable than in Honda’s Civic hybrid,
particularly at low speed or when the engine is cold.
To boost fuel economy Toyota has worked hard to pare weight and improve
aerodynamics. That striking, slippery shape does bring consequences, however.
The Prius’s rear windscreen is split with an almost horizontal upper part,
affecting rearward visibility and rendering the rear wiper largely pointless.
The front screen pillars, meanwhile, get in the way when approaching junctions
or roundabouts, requiring extra caution and some pigeon-like head movements to
maintain safety.
Despite these niggles we found the Prius likeable and easy to live with. It
is smooth, quiet, refined and fast enough. The suspension coped well with
London’s pot-holed and uneven tarmac, and traversing road-humps did not require
slowing to a crawl.
Urban buyers looking for an upmarket, safe and spacious five-door with
excellent fuel economy should definitely test drive a Prius before making their
purchase.
So, how does a hybrid Prius work?
Not True
"If the majority of your driving is done at constant speed on the motorway, you might as well buy an ordinary car and not lug around a hybrid?s heavy batteries." 1. This statement does not match my experience. Setting the Cruise control to 60, I get 65-70 mpg, on a long motorway run. 2. Your statement that 52 mpg is normal only applies if you make no effort to drive economically. The Prisu provides lots of feedback to help you do this, and with a bit of practice I have now got my around-town mpg up to 62 mpg. 3. MPG is NOT the issue, in regards to climate change. CO2 IS the issue. The Prius produces FAR less CO2 than a conventional car of equivalent size and power.
Posted by Geoff, 19 Aug 2008
MPG
Where am i going wrong,I write down every fill up i.e.price against litres and on town driving my Prius averages 38mpg approx.I bought it brand new March 07, I can't get 62 on a motorway run.
Posted by Peter, 09 Nov 2008