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Toyota pious



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Published Date: 08 May 2008
THE hybrid Toyota Prius has triumphed in a major satisfaction survey.
The petrol-electric engined car has taken top spot in the influential JD Power-What Car? magazine poll after sharing the honours with the Lexis IS last year.

The Prius scored 901 points out of a possible 1,000 in a survey of more than 16,000 car
owners who had had their vehicles for an average of two years.

A total of 100 models were assessed for four measures of satisfaction – quality and reliability, vehicle appeal, dealer service satisfaction and ownership costs.

The Lexus IS slipped into third place this year with 861 points, below the Honda Jazz, with 872, which was third last year.

The top manufacturer was Lexus on 866 points, with Skoda second on 846 and Honda third on 844. At the bottom of the list was Fiat on 744 points.

Steve Fowler, editor of What Car?, said: "The Prius already has iconic status because of its green credentials. Now it's demonstrating it's also the watchword for reliability and satisfaction.

"It delivers on many of the points that matter most to car buyers today – it's environmentally friendly and reasonably frugal, yet it's also reliable and a great car to own."

Martin Volk, senior research manager at JD Power, said: "Honda distinguishes itself by garnering the greatest number of segment awards in the 2008 study and also by 'placing' in the top three nameplates.

"While Lexus maintains its position as the top-ranked nameplate, two non-premium nameplates – Skoda and Honda – are also placed among the top three, which is a testament to the continued efforts of these car makers to provide an excellent vehicle ownership experience."

View the full JD Power League table here (opens as a pdf)

SO IS IT AS GOOD AS THEY SAY?

THE Toyota Prius may be loved by environmentally concerned celebrities, but it has been trounced by other models in several surveys of the greenest cars.

The petrol-electric hybrid was launched in Japan in 1997 and named European Car of the Year when it launched here four years ago.

Leonardo DiCaprio arrived at last year's Oscars ceremony in one, while fellow Hollywood stars Brad Pitt and Cameron Diaz are among film star owners.

Hybrid cars are seen as greener because they are powered by batteries at low speeds and petrol at higher speeds.

However, the Prius was beaten by the diesel-engined Volkswagen Polo Blue Motion to the top spot in a government guide to greener motoring published last year.

The VW produces 99 grammes of per kilometre – five grammes fewer than the Prius.

The Prius, which has featured in the Scottish Government's ministerial fleet, also failed to make the top ten in the Environmental Transport Association buyers' guide to greenest cars last year.

It was marked down for poor pedestrian safety, scoring only 36 per cent in that category.

Consumer groups in the United States have criticised Toyota's fuel consumption claims for the Prius, but the car maker said everyone drove their car differently and Prius owners were more likely to watch mpg rates.



The full article contains 518 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 08 May 2008 11:11 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Douglas,

Bathgate 08/05/2008 07:35:16
The main reason for fuel frugality is that the middle class owners are lying in bed nursing hangovers, too drunk to drive, so spending less on petrol while saving the planet and neglecting their children.
It's multi-tasking for a greener world.
2

Slasher McGurk,

08/05/2008 08:14:23
The worst car i have ever driven, crappy handling and looks like a tree hugging designer sneezed on a page and thought oh, i will call it a prius. The automatic gearbox is the worst designed system i have ever seen.
3

paulr,

edinburgh 08/05/2008 08:19:20
"The Prius already has iconic status because of its green credentials.
Credentials which we now know to be totally false and misleading.
4

Boy Wonder,

08/05/2008 08:33:28
Prius ... lunchbox on wheels!
5

Yane,

08/05/2008 10:01:21
Are there no enough ads in the paper without them posing as text?
6

Alternative (High Octane) Fuel Head,

Edinburgh 08/05/2008 10:56:40
Give me an XJR any day.
7

Professor22,

lochgelly 08/05/2008 13:22:48
Prius runs on batteries than become end of life within 3 years and need replaced. What do you do with all the old batteries....How very green!

Combustion engines last 10 years, less to produce and less to keep on the road.

Hmmmmm, not a treehugger in sight then......
8

Big Eddie,

Edinburgh 08/05/2008 15:13:05
To my mind the Toyota Prius may score maximum smugness points, but if you want to minimise your fuel bills and your carbon emissions, you'd be better off going for a regular petrol car with a small engine. It'll cost a whole lot less as well.

The Prius set are more concerned with appearances than with genuine sustainability.
9

Robcarp,

Calgary, Canada 08/05/2008 19:18:42
I don't think I qualify as a treehugger - my wife and I bought the Prius for the fuel economy and reliability. We've halved our gas costs compared to our previous mid-size sedan, even with gas prices going up, so that tells me it's saving gas, and if that leads to lower emissions, that's fine too. If you're looking for sporty handling and pickup, buy another car, but if you're looking for a well built vehicle with good room inside that will save money on gas, this is a great option. It's performed well through a Canadian winter (parked outside overnight several nights in a row at -30C without the block heater plugged in and still started up fine), including handling a foot of snow and plenty of ice with ease, and we're very happy with it. We were concerned about replacing the batteries, but none of the Calgary dealers have had to replace any batteries yet (even for the older model Prius, some of which are now going on eight years with their original batteries), so the comment about the batteries dying after three years is simply uninformed and wrong.
10

Professor22,

lochgelly 08/05/2008 21:21:36
no 9 robcarp, so what does the owners manual say about the warranty of the batteries?
11

Professor22,

lochgelly 08/05/2008 21:24:05
I stand corrected! 8 years or 100k warranty.

Welcome to PriusChat, Morris. Prius HV battery replacements have been rare in the 2001-2003 model, and perhaps none at all in the newer model yet. I believe the US warranty is 100,000 miles in most states and 150k in Calif. and a few other states.

Just yesterday I heard Dave Hermance (one of Toyota's chief engineers) say that a replacement battery for the classic model costs $2500 and that the new model is less (it's smaller). I had previously heard numbers closer to $4K. He also mentioned Toyota's lab testing of batteries to 150k miles with no measurable degradation.

The Odometer Champ is probably Andrew Grant's Prius taxi fleet in Vancouver BC. No battery replacements there yet.

Sad to say, a steady supply of used HV batteries comes from wrecked vehicles. These typically sell for $400-$1000. This is the alternative to buying new.

Hypothetically, a battery failure by slow degradation would probably present itself as reduced power, performance, or fuel economy. There might be warning lights on the display, that would lead the technician to test the HV battery.

 

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