Hybrid (Corolla, Camry, Civic) vs none Hybrid?

Scaramouche

Master Don Juan
Joined
Jan 27, 2008
Messages
4,098
Reaction score
1,218
Age
80
Location
Australia
There’s been no difference whatsoever in tire wear in my experience and I’ve never heard this be a concern among hybrid or EV cars.
Hi EyeBRollin,
Batteries are very Heavy,compared to similar sized conventional vehicles..EV's are heavier on tyres and brake shoes...I only saw my first EV last year,first charging Station only six months ago...But you have seven years practical experience and you like them,I shall try and keep an open mind.
 
Last edited:

EyeBRollin

Master Don Juan
Joined
Oct 18, 2015
Messages
10,702
Reaction score
8,629
Age
35
Hi EyeBRollin,
Batteries are very Heavy,compared to similar sized conventional vehicles..EV's are heavier on tyres and brake shoes...I only saw my first EV last year,first charging Station only six months ago...But you have seven years practical experience and you like them,I shall try and keep an open mind.
EV batteries have only gotten lighter. You have to look at the total curb weight of the vehicle. Engine has weight of its own, as does fuel, transmission, fluid etc. My volt is 3500 lbs and has both battery and engine. my previous car was an ICE that shared the same chassis and weighted 3200 lbs. That 300 lbs has a negligible effect on braking as already mentioned in this thread EVs and hybrids do not use their mechanical brakes at all outside of emergency stopping. You will not need brake maintenance with these cars.
 

Bible_Belt

Master Don Juan
Joined
Jul 27, 2005
Messages
17,128
Reaction score
5,757
Age
48
Location
midwestern cow field 40
A friend has the new Nissan ev. He got a sweetheart deal, because he works for the company and they werent selling very many.
They let him charge it for free at work. I've learned a few things from him, like when they advertise a range, that is during warm weather. A 300 mile range is 200 miles when it is cold outside.

Also, there is a big difference between the basic charging stations versus the fast ones. It's drastic, like six hours versus six minutes. So the location of these fast chargers is critical to planning a long trip. It works well when he stays on the interstate highway, but not for rural meandering.

It does seem like a bullsh1t that Tesla charging stations are not compatible with other cars. It's ridiculous to have to build double the infrastructure.
 

The Duke

Master Don Juan
Joined
Feb 4, 2008
Messages
5,688
Reaction score
8,720
There’s been no difference whatsoever in tire wear in my experience and I’ve never heard this be a concern among hybrid or EV cars.
Depends on driving habits. I've heard of many complain about it. Going thru tires on their Tesla in 25k miles.
 

EyeBRollin

Master Don Juan
Joined
Oct 18, 2015
Messages
10,702
Reaction score
8,629
Age
35
Depends on driving habits. I've heard of many complain about it. Going thru tires on their Tesla in 25k miles.
Most Tesla are AWD and IIRC use cheap tires. Just get tires with a tread wear warranty. The OEM I had was Michelin Energy Savers, a 50K tire.

A friend has the new Nissan ev. He got a sweetheart deal, because he works for the company and they werent selling very many.
They let him charge it for free at work. I've learned a few things from him, like when they advertise a range, that is during warm weather. A 300 mile range is 200 miles when it is cold outside.

Also, there is a big difference between the basic charging stations versus the fast ones. It's drastic, like six hours versus six minutes. So the location of these fast chargers is critical to planning a long trip. It works well when he stays on the interstate highway, but not for rural meandering.

It does seem like a bullsh1t that Tesla charging stations are not compatible with other cars. It's ridiculous to have to build double the infrastructure.
Yeah range drops off in the winter, it can be up to 50% lower. Electric is less efficient at heat generation. Plug-in hybrids will often use the gas engine for heat in this scenarios. The flip side is there is less of an A/C penalty vs ICE in hot weather.

There are 3 charging levels:
Level 1: all EVs come with a power cord. You can plug this into any standard outlet. It nets 3-4 miles per hour of charge. Charges an EV in 3 days, plug in hybrid in 12 hours.

Level 2: This is standard level Installed at home stations and in most public chargers. Nets 20-25 miles per hour of charge. Charges an EV in 8-10 hours, plug-in hybrid in 2.

Level 3: Tesla Superchargers and Fast Chargers. Only see these at rest areas. Charges an EV 150 miles in a half hour of charge. Incompatible with plug-in hybrids.

Tesla chargers are mechanically compatible with other brands of EVs. It’s a matter of if Elon wants to open them up.
 

Channel your excited feelings into positive thoughts and behaviors. You will attract women by being enthusiastic, radiating energy, and becoming someone who is fun to be around.

Quote taken from The SoSuave Guide to Women and Dating, which you can read for FREE.

Scaramouche

Master Don Juan
Joined
Jan 27, 2008
Messages
4,098
Reaction score
1,218
Age
80
Location
Australia
EV batteries have only gotten lighter. You have to look at the total curb weight of the vehicle. Engine has weight of its own, as does fuel, transmission, fluid etc. My volt is 3500 lbs and has both battery and engine. my previous car was an ICE that shared the same chassis and weighted 3200 lbs. That 300 lbs has a negligible effect on braking as already mentioned in this thread EVs and hybrids do not use their mechanical brakes at all outside of emergency stopping. You will not need brake maintenance with these cars.
Hi Rollin Eyes,
Yes,they are heavier,hybrids particularly....BMW's are 25%heavier,here's an article whinging about it https://www.insidehook.com/reviews/bmw-m5-sports-sedan-weigh-more-f150
 

sevbucmash

Senior Don Juan
Joined
Sep 10, 2022
Messages
257
Reaction score
106
Age
40
Starting this thread was just my beginning of deeper dive into this subject, of cheap new reliable fun car. You see, I'll be buying a brand new car sometime this February or March, because I'd need me some wheels. Now, new or used I don't know. If used is cheap enough, 4 grand, probably used, but if used is closer to 10, I'll make that payment plundge.

So anyway. Here are my findings.

2025 Honda Civic hybrid system = no bueno. People are getting crap fuel mileage.
2025 Toyota Corolla hybrid system = bueno. People are consistantly getting 60 mpg. Advertised is 50 mpg. The only thing is that it's borring.

2025 Toyota Camry Hybrid = best. For it's money. Best. A lot of car. Excellent fuel economy. Fun. Not borring.

I'm however, after conventional Civic manual. Keyword here is manual. Because otherwise I'd get borred with the car. If I'm to have a cheap car, at least it would have to be fun. I want a hatch, which is not made in year 2025 with manual. So it's either compromise for Civic Si sedan, or look for previous years manual hatch.
 

EyeBRollin

Master Don Juan
Joined
Oct 18, 2015
Messages
10,702
Reaction score
8,629
Age
35
Hi Rollin Eyes,
Yes,they are heavier,hybrids particularly....BMW's are 25%heavier,here's an article whinging about it https://www.insidehook.com/reviews/bmw-m5-sports-sedan-weigh-more-f150
That’s an outlier. A 5,400 lb Sedan sounds like a personal problem.

Curb weight of some common PHEVs/Hybrids/EVs:
Chevrolet Volt (discontinued) 3,500 lbs
Chevrolet Bolt 3,600 lbs
Toyota Prius Prime 3,500 lbs
Honda Accord Hybrid 3,500 lbs
Toyota Camry Hybrid 3,500 lbs
Toyota Corolla Hybrud 2,900 lbs
Hyundai Ioniq 3,000 lbs
Toyota Crown 4,000 lbs
Hyundai Sonata Hybrid 3,500 lbs
Nissan Leaf 3,500 lbs
 

EyeBRollin

Master Don Juan
Joined
Oct 18, 2015
Messages
10,702
Reaction score
8,629
Age
35
I'm however, after conventional Civic manual. Keyword here is manual. Because otherwise I'd get borred with the car. If I'm to have a cheap car, at least it would have to be fun. I want a hatch, which is not made in year 2025 with manual. So it's either compromise for Civic Si sedan, or look for previous years manual hatch.
If you want a manual, get one while you still can. The tech is obsolete. Even Auto Transmissions are starting to be slowly phased out for “single/no speed”and CVTs.
 
Top