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Unconstitutional Patriot
Join Date: Apr 2000
Location: volunteer state
Posts: 5,620
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Fuel efficient autos
Are there any comparisons between the hybrid and non-hybrid models now that hybrids have been out for a while? For example, which was the better buy: the 07 Civic Hybrid or the 2007 gas-only version? Is the savings worth the extra complexity?
I'd like to get a gas miser vehicle. I would like to see at least 40 mpg combined. The only cars out of the mix are the VW TDI vehicles. I've heard too many bad things about them. Trying to figure out if it is cheaper to buy a used gas-burner or take a chance on the hybrids. |
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Registered
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The only hybrid I have much knowledge about is the Prius. It is reliable, minimal maintenance, no penalty for the complexity. We have about 70K miles on ours, had the HID headlights replaced under warranty and that's it. My father has something like 125K miles on his gen 1 Prius, nothing has gone wrong. A replacement battery is something like $3K now (or you can go all DIY and rebuild a used one), he still doesn't need one.
Real world MPG is indeed high, but is sensitive to how you drive - I get 5 MPG better than my wife - there are habits/tricks to maximizing MPG, you have to learn them, and she ignores them all, accelerates to stoplights and so on. Resale value is generally good, currently is very high given the shortage of Priuses on dealer lots but that will be cured by year-end. That said, for lowest spend, it is hard to beat a used econobox. The MPG may be lower than the hybrid alternative, but buying used wins out almost every time. Further, it is a bad time to buy a Prius or other hybrid now - production disruptions in Japan have created a major shortage of inventory, plus high gas prices has driven demand up. In general, late model used car prices are high. All this is easing but has just started to ease. I'd wait until early next year and/or buy a used car. BTW I've heard good things about the TDIs. If you do a lot of city driving in traffic, a hybrid is better since the engine shuts off. On the open highway, the TDI is every bit as fuel-efficient as the Prius. I'd be irritated at diesel prices though.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? Last edited by jyl; 07-07-2011 at 07:11 AM.. |
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least common denominator
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: San Pedro,CA
Posts: 22,506
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I was this close to buying a hybrid... then Calif. pulled them off the diamond lane and that was a deal breaker for me (could have cut my commute from 45 to 30 minutes).
Did a lot of research... hybrids are good for 100K miles before they start needing expensive maintenance (generally speaking) The new gas only Hyundai Elantra gets a claimed 40 mpg. There is a Pruis BBS much like this where you can learn a lot. Be prepared for the hybrid haters that will post here in 3... 2... 1...
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Gary Fisher 29er 2019 Kia Stinger 2.0t gone ![]() 1995 Miata Sold 1984 944 Sold ![]() I am not lost for I know where I am, however where I am is lost. - Winnie the poo. Last edited by scottmandue; 07-07-2011 at 07:11 AM.. |
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Binge User
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My civic get's 30mpg around town, not sure about freeway mileage yet. I think it'll be tough to find real world 40mpg combined out of a non hybrid. I've only driven one hybrid (Altima) & didn't care for the way it drove. I paid $16.2K for mine, tough for me to justify the extra money for a hybrid at this point. Almost bought a Fit until I sat in one. Love my Civic.
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Paul |
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Registered
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: SoFLA
Posts: 5,536
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Unregistered
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: a wretched hive of scum and villainy
Posts: 55,652
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No hatin, just facts:
Just exactly what savings are you refering to? The MSRP of a civic hybrid is over $8k more than a comparable non-hybrid civic. Honda Civic Add to that the additional stealer mark-up for a hybrid, and you'd be paying a lot of money for that smug. The hybrid "gets up to 44 cty/44 hwy mpg". The conventional civic with the 1.8 liter engine "gets Up to 28 cty/36 hwy mpg". So figure it probably ends up around 30. So the hybrid gets "up to" 14 mpg better than the regular civic. Suppose you bought both the civic hybrid and the conventional sedan. say the hybrid cost $9000 more. Then you drive them both 100,000 miles. that's assuming the batteries lasted that long. In the regular civic you'd burn 3333 gallons of gas. In the hybrid you'd burn 2272 gallons of gas. At $3.50 a gallon, you'd save $3713.50 in gas. So in which math class do they teach that is makes sense to spend $9000 to save $3700? You'd have to drive it 243,000 miles without major repairs to break even! That's for a 2011 car. So what about a 2007 used civic hybrid? Used TMV from $14,361 for the hybrid, Used TMV from $9,890 for the civic sedan. You'd still be paying almost a $4500 premium for the hybrid, and that's for a 4 year old car that's close to being half used up. If you bought a 2007 civic hybrid and put 50,000 miles on it, you'd save close to $1900 in gas, but it'd cost you $2900 MORE to own the hybrid. You'd do better at trade-in time but not enough to break even. the ONLY way a hybrid civic would make financial sense is if the the GUBMINT paid you to drive it. Last edited by sammyg2; 07-07-2011 at 07:41 AM.. |
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Banned
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Dana Point, Ca
Posts: 55,591
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but my wife keeps telling me "it's not about the money, it's saving the earth" I'm not buying one. Let Algor save the earth.
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You do not have permissi
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: midwest
Posts: 39,832
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That's a good point. Hybrids can be made to be extremely fuel-efficient, but they are currently programmed to satisfy American lead-foot traffic conditions and consumer demand.
At the same time, the fuel economy on many popular brands are the same(or even worse) as 30 years ago. So consumers are getting squeezed: Purchase an outrageously-priced hybrid, or get poor milege in the cheaper gas version. |
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You do not have permissi
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: midwest
Posts: 39,832
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FWIW, the gas vehicles of today usually test 0-20ppm HC, versus 50-200ppm HC with those before the 1980s.
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Registered
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Santa Cruz, CA
Posts: 613
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If all you care about is saving money over the term of ownership, buy a used, small displacement motorcycle and you're done. Nothing can touch it.
Or if you insist on a car, a $2k Honda Civic or something similar. I bought a Prius because I had some size requirements for my family that only a midsize wagon or small SUV could hit. My Prius can hold a 911 long hood, 2 RSR bumpers, headlights, a ducktail, a toolbox and a box of random parts easily. Or two mountain bikes. Or 5 people. Or a 7 foot tall Christmas tree. So I was looking at the Prius, or maybe an Audi/VW wagon or something like a Honda CRV. I also wanted something new, not used. So for comparable vehicles, it was at the low end price-wise and blew everything else away in mileage and resale value. The only thing close was a VW TDI, but since our Prius is used as 99% for short trips around town, it gets way better mileage than the TDI and no diesel fuel hassles. The engineer in me also likes how the Prius takes waste heat from braking and engine idling which would otherwise be dissipated and coverts that to useful stored energy. I couldn't care less about saving the planet. The planet is just fine, it doesn't need my help. I'd happily buy a non-hybrid that does what I need better than a Prius, as soon as one exists. If I missed a better car for my needs, let me know what it is. |
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Checked out
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: On a beach
Posts: 10,127
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This isn't quite in that league of mileage, but I had a new Chevy Cruze for a couple of weeks recently. I was really surprised at how high the mileage was.
At 60-65 on the highway, over a long period of time, it got right around 40 mpg. At 75 mph it still got around 38 mpg. This is average over hundreds and hundreds of miles. With passengers and a lot of luggage, etc. Total for the two weeks in combined driving was a little over 30 mpg. This is not a small car, and it had plenty of power. Surprising. |
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Checked out
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: On a beach
Posts: 10,127
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I also drove a Prius for a bit. Not the current model, the one right before it.
I'm really surprised people like those. Way too slow in modern traffic, and the engine feels and sounds like a lawnmower engine. The driving dynamics are horrible. That huge cheap black plastic dash is a monstrosity, too. It seemed to get around 44 mpg on the highway. |
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Registered
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Quote:
Fuel Economy, Hypermiling, EcoModding News and Forum - Ecomodder.com Fuel Economy Forum
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1977 911S Targa 2.7L (CIS) Silver/Black 2012 Infiniti G37X Coupe (AWD) 3.7L Black on Black 1989 modified Scat II HP Hovercraft George, Architect |
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The hybrid batteries will obviously last for 100K miles, since they are warranteed for that long. Real world experience is that on average they last much, much longer.
I'm not betting on gas prices staying $3.50/gal for the next decade. The trend is up, up, up. ![]() There is a value to predictability. When gas prices fluctuate violently, it is nice to have one's expenses more stable. Remember all the moaning here when gas recently shot to near $4? The higher your MPG, the less you notice.
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1989 3.2 Carrera coupe; 1988 Westy Vanagon, Zetec; 1986 E28 M30; 1994 W124; 2004 S211 What? Uh . . . “he” and “him”? |
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So far the TDI is getting around 33mpg around town, 40+ on the fwy (and evidently that improves as the engine breaks in). Diesel prices are coming down but it still is a bit over 91 octane prices. No regrets at this point as I like the interior, DSG and torque on the VW way more than any of the other alternatives. As long as I stay out of the shop I'll be golden...
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N-Gruppe doesn't exist
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my sister is on their second tdi jetta wagon only because they got some water damage from a leaking sun roof after 5+ years of fairly trouble free driving. they got a great trade in value compared to having to do a carpet and other interior replacement. the new one isnt quite as good milage wise but they can still do the 400+ mile trip to my parents on a little over 1/2 tank of fuel.
they never got less than 40mpg on the old one and easily were getting close to 60mpg on a couple of long road trips. gass up in the morning and you are good to go for the day. pitstops consisted of food and bathroom use. not a bad snow car for denver to Santa Fe several times a year.
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Ted '70 911T 3.0L "SKIPPY" R-Gruppe #477 '73 914 2.0L SOLD bye bye "lil SMOKEY" ![]() "Silence is Golden, but duct tape is SILVER.” other flat fours:'77 VWBus 2.0L & 2002 ImprezaTS 2.5L |
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AutoBahned
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why not the new plug in Prius?
or a Chevy Volt? (not real cheap tho) anybody that thinks gas will stay under $/gal. for very long should also buy land in Florida |
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Registered
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Fla panhandle / Roaming in my motorhome
Posts: 4,332
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We drove a VW Passat TDI wagon about 2K miles all over England last summer, and it was loaded with four of us plus baggage and got great mileage I'd guess 35+mpg . usually had to stop once or twice to clean the windshield between fill ups.
It took some getting used to the driving characteristics, very little grunt down low revs. It did very well at highway speeds. Cheers Richard |
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I am amazed at how much driving habits change mpg. Believe it or not, I get about 28-30 mpg out of my 93 maxima. Being a 5 speed helps, as well as coasting to stop lights, down hills, and not using brakes unless needed. I have to really try to get good mpg, but it is possible. Like Jeremy Clarkson stated, "It's not what you drive, it's how you drive it".
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Dustin |
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5String
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: SoCal, USA
Posts: 1,225
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We've rented a couple of diesel wagons while on holiday - an Opel and a Peugeot - and both were spectaculary economical, with better performance than I ever would have expected. With that in mind, I'll be all over a Jetta TDI wagon when comes in a year or so for the E39 to go away.
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5String Tell not a soul that you have seen me; breathe not a word of what I say.... The Northwest Files |
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