Ian22 said:Anyone have experience living in a Prius in one location throughout the year? Is the battery efficient in the extreme heat and extreme cold?
Suanne said:mpruet is exactly correct on how the Prius' internal combustion engine comes on intermittently to recharge the high-voltage drive train batteries. When running the AC that's all that the car does because the AC is run off of those high-voltage batteries.
But, the Prius' heater gets it's heat from the internal combustion engine, like the heater in a conventional vehicle. So, the Prius' engine runs intermittently for two purposes when the heater is on: 1) To create heat to warm the inside of the car, and 2) To keep the high-voltage batteries charged up.
If in extreme cold, I would not expect the Prius to be very efficient. But, I'm speaking theoretically here because I drive to warmer weather when it starts getting uncomfortably chilly.
You may want to consider joining the Facebook group called Prius Camping and ask your question there. I suspect someone in that group may have actual experience being in their Prius in extreme weather conditions.
Suanne ... warming her Prius now, pre-sunrise
kllcbosmetris said:Do you know the voltage of those high-voltage batteries (i.e. is it ~47v or ~360v)? Is it dangerous to sleep in a vehicle when you are close to that level of high voltage (i.e. is there an increased fire hazard)? Do you know the cost of replacing those high-voltage batteries?
Suanne said:I'm on my 2nd Prius. My 2004's high-voltage batteries were NiCad; my current 2015 also uses NiCad. If I understand the research I've done, the most recent articles say that the 2016s and newer (Gen4s) come with the option of either Lithium or NiCad, depending on the package that you get. The newer-technology Lithium batteries weigh less and take up less space for the same power, so Toyota can add more options to the cars with those batteries. Toyota assures that both types of batteries perform the same when it comes to operating the car and its efficiency.
I'm not really answering your questions except to show that it's more complicated than one might expect. The battery voltage is really beyond my knowledge base. But, consider joining the forum Prius Chat and ask that question there.
I've been sleeping in a Prius since 2009. So, my research and experience is that it's not any more dangerous than sleeping above a conventional vehicle's fuel tank. That is, the risk is minimal when your vehicle is maintained. The only concern I've read about the batteries specifically, are from those that think they emit an electromagnetic field which is inherently harmful. Toyota is assuring its customers that the Lithium battery technology that they are using in some 2016 and later models is much improved since the incidents of the Tesla and Samsung battery fires.
If you go to a dealer to replace high-voltage NiCad batteries, it'll probably cost more than $3000. If you get reconditioned NiCad batteries from a shop that specializes in that, then it'll be around $1000. I don't know about Lithium battery replacement costs. That's another question to ask at the Prius Chat forum. My 2004 had 232,000 miles on it and all of its original high-voltage battery cells were in good condition at the time I gave the car to my son-in-law earlier this year. And the car is still running trouble-free for him today. I was the original owner.
Hope that helps.
Suanne
Harmonica said:Is it possible (and easy for one person) to take the back seats out of the Prius?
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