by AgentR » Thu 02 Jul 2009, 14:03:19
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Outcast_Searcher', 'O')ne comment about the payoff period. I presume you doomers expect an escalating oil price trend
I'm not at all convinced peak oil tells us anything about dollar price evaluation, and I'm about as doomeristic as they come.
Something you are leaving off of the table, is exactly the thing that really bothers me about the Prius. 250k mile lifetime standard maintenance expenses. I am very unlikely to replace any car before 10-15 yrs and/or 250k in mileage, or close. The standard maintenance expenses for such a period for a small, efficient ICE vehicle are well understood to me. I remain concerned about the costs associated with making it to 250k miles and 12 yrs on a battery system.
Basically the question that remains troubling is, how often do the batteries need to be replaced over the course of a 12yr life, and how much will it cost to do so, including any future projected environmental disposal fees?
You also seem to be highballing the Yaris price and leaving the Prius price as indicated on the spec sheet; when, if anything, the exact opposite situation is likely to happen at point of sale, because of the trendiness of the Prius.
My bets on initial drive out price w/TTL:
Yaris: 13,700 Prius 25,400
Now to fuel price break evens:
Assuming standard maintenance costs as equal (I believe Prius will end up quite a bit higher though); and what I think I hear you saying about your likely driving, 70% city, and 10k miles / yr; it will take an average gas price of $9.64 per gallon to balance the two economically. This gets WORSE, the fewer miles you drive; not better. For instance, 80% city driving, and 8k miles per year... The price has to be $11.26 per gallon in order to balance the cost.
The interesting thing is that despite a hybrid being better in-city; the spread between highway mileage of the prius, vs the highway mileage of the yaris also yield an interesting result; at 30% city driving, and 18k miles / yr the break even price for gas drops to $7.22 / gallon. Still very high of course, but it should put to rest this notion about hybrid for city.
Basically put; I can't come up with any reasonable condition where the Prius saves money. Its not designed to save money. It is designed to be cool and spiffy to a certain segment of their market, which I suspect includes you. Which is fine.
To suggest that J6P should be looking at the Prius in order to save money though?? Thats no where near reality.
Yes, we are. As we are.
And so shall we remain; Until the end.