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Tacosyeg

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The drive strategy is likely way different between the grand highlander and Tacoma. I think a better comparison is the Tundra where you get an additional 2MPG city and nothing on the highway.
Hence why I also included the Land Cruiser with the same engine and transmission that produces the same numbers as the Tacoma.

I should note that the LC numbers were never taken off the Canadian Toyota site either, so they are definitely official. I expect 26 to 27 mpg combined from the Tacoma.
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mramseyisu

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Hence why I also included the Land Cruiser with the same engine and transmission that produces the same numbers as the Tacoma.

I should note that the LC numbers were never taken off the Canadian Toyota site either, so they are definitely official. I expect 26 to 27 mpg combined from the Tacoma.
I don't think the Land Cruiser is all that relevant. I've heard from the head Tacoma engineer in several of these videos say that they're more concerned about torque than fuel economy in their trucks. Seems to me like Toyota has different priorities between their trucks and SUVs.
 
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Tacosyeg

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I don't think the Land Cruiser is all that relevant. I've heard from the head Tacoma engineer in several of these videos say that they're more concerned about torque than fuel economy in their trucks. Seems to me like Toyota has different priorities between their trucks and SUVs.
The new LC and Tacoma (Hybrid Max) have the same engine, HP, and torque - 326 HP and 465 lb ft. I'm not sure what you're getting at. The comparison is definitely relevant.
 

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I don't think the Land Cruiser is all that relevant. I've heard from the head Tacoma engineer in several of these videos say that they're more concerned about torque than fuel economy in their trucks. Seems to me like Toyota has different priorities between their trucks and SUVs.
Sorry, what?

The engine is the exact same engine as the Land Cruiser. The LC is not tuned for MPG either. Neither is the Sequoia.

It is tuned for power, not MPG. This has been explained ad nauseam. Anyone still looking for high MPG numbers from the MAX either doesn't understand that hybrid doesnt always equal MPG or they are setting themselves up to be disappointed.

The Corvette ERay is a hybrid. It does not get 40mpg.
 

mramseyisu

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The new LC and Tacoma (Hybrid Max) have the same engine, HP, and torque - 326 HP and 465 lb ft. I'm not sure what you're getting at. The comparison is definitely relevant.
I work with drive strategy guys all the time in my day job doing vehicle level energy management for off road and have been really getting into the weeds on this lately with a BEV program. Just because two vehicles share a drivetrain doesn't mean the way the torque is applied is the same because they're considered two different applications. Granted a hybrid vehicle is different than a BEV like I've been dealing with for the past year or so but how fast you allow the torque to be applied will greatly impact energy efficiency. My educated guess on a hybrid drivetrain is that Toyota is looking at the uses for the vehicle (a truck and SUV have very different load files they're looking at) and they are determining when the electric motor kicks in, how hard it kicks in and when it shuts off. It also matters if the electric motor is on transmission input or output. On the trucks Toyota put the electric motor on the transmission output which is better for transferring torque to the wheel, on the SUV's they put it on the transmission input which make the engine more efficient.
 

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Tacosyeg

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I work with drive strategy guys all the time in my day job doing vehicle level energy management for off road and have been really getting into the weeds on this lately with a BEV program. Just because two vehicles share a drivetrain doesn't mean the way the torque is applied is the same because they're considered two different applications. Granted a hybrid vehicle is different than a BEV like I've been dealing with for the past year or so but how fast you allow the torque to be applied will greatly impact energy efficiency. My educated guess on a hybrid drivetrain is that Toyota is looking at the uses for the vehicle (a truck and SUV have very different load files they're looking at) and they are determining when the electric motor kicks in, how hard it kicks in and when it shuts off. It also matters if the electric motor is on transmission input or output. On the trucks Toyota put the electric motor on the transmission output which is better for transferring torque to the wheel, on the SUV's they put it on the transmission input which make the engine more efficient.
If you say so. The applications are nearly identical when you dive into towing, etc. From a manufacturing perspective, it makes more sense to share the entire drivetrain between the two, specifically the Limited Tacoma and Land Cruiser. The LC isn't exactly efficient either, so again, not sure what you're getting at. It's pretty reasonable to expect similar numbers between the two.
 

mramseyisu

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If you say so. The applications are nearly identical when you dive into towing, etc. From a manufacturing perspective, it makes more sense to share the entire drivetrain between the two, specifically the Limited Tacoma and Land Cruiser. The LC isn't exactly efficient either, so again, not sure what you're getting at. It's pretty reasonable to expect similar numbers between the two.
The TLDR of that is just because they have the same hardware doesn't mean they have the same software. The software will have a massive impact in efficiency.
 

cgalloni

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so basically same MPG as I get now in my TRD offroad now. what is the point?
 

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And keep in mind, these #'s are with this monstrosity installed. And life hack.. if ya want a easy painfree removal, just drive the truck into any parking lot with a divider, pull back and it should be removed automatically ;).
2024 Tacoma 2024 Tacoma MPG Fuel Economy Per Trim (2.4L iForce Engine) Screenshot 2023-11-29 123457
 

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I wouldn't hold your breath. It's my understanding the batteries only help with Inital takeoff to combat the turbo lag don't they?

I have a buddy who owns a 2023 Tundra and he said he doesn't notice much a difference with the batteries at all.
The tundra is also an entirely different vehicle that is much heavier.

You absolutely will feel 465 lb/ft torque in a vehicle that is a good bit lighter. I'm quite confident the thing will fly.
 

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Toyota could have gave the Taco a 20+ gallon tank atleast with these crappy "estimated" MPG's.
 

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Was all excited about this truck. Now I'm totally let down. Figured the hybrid models will only increase MPG by probably 5mpg. If you compare it with say the RAV4 that goes up 4pmg for the hybrid model from the standard. So I'm out. I'll find something different.
Agreed. I'm just gonna get an older one and wait until they get with the program and develop some meaningful new hybrid tech.
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