My guess is April since a few prominent youtube channels that were at the previous media day indicated thats when they expect to drive the hybrids for the first time.Iām still accepting the price tags for TRD OR iForce Max (which we donāt yet have, but we have a figure to determine what it will be more than) and am cross-shopping Broncos which have hefty price tags too. Iām planning on getting the Taco lifted with new wheels and tires straight from the dealership, so Iāll consider the Bronco with the lifted, 35ā tire āSasquatchā package - straight from the factory. But, do I really want a Ford instead of the newest version of the best truck (and, possibly, vehicle) ever made? Does anyone have an idea of when we might see pricing and MPGs for the hybrids?
hybrid mpg was already leaked via code on their website site.Iām still accepting the price tags for TRD OR iForce Max (which we donāt yet have, but we have a figure to determine what it will be more than) and am cross-shopping Broncos which have hefty price tags too. Iām planning on getting the Taco lifted with new wheels and tires straight from the dealership, so Iāll consider the Bronco with the lifted, 35ā tire āSasquatchā package - straight from the factory. But, do I really want a Ford instead of the newest version of the best truck (and, possibly, vehicle) ever made? Does anyone have an idea of when we might see pricing and MPGs for the hybrids?
You are looking at this wrong, you are better efficiency, a much better low end power band, a better transmission, and much improved torque, the bonus is that you will get similar if not better MPGās in a much needed and improved package.I was all aboard the hype wagon until I saw the fuel mileage numbers. I've got no problem going to a 4cyl from the 6cyl; but NOT with the same fuel mileage.
And you are right, gotta let them play out for a few years first. I've got a 22 OR that I'll be keeping for a bit and to be honest, I might even slide over to the LandCruiser next purchase.
Those definitely aren't the numbers that were leaked. The LC #s are on the Canadian website at 8.7 l/100km combined, unless there was something else recently.hybrid mpg was already leaked via code on their website site.
city 22
Highway 24
Combined 23
Those numbers seem very plausible. I've been comparing the Grand Highlander 2.4T AWD vs Hybrid Max AWD to get an idea of pricing, weight, and mpg differences between iForce and iForce Max. It's not a direct comparison because the hybrid systems are slightly different, but it's the closest comparison we have until the land cruiser MPGs are released. I'm not convinced the "leaked" 27mpg for the landcruiser is accurate when that is the rating for the much more aerodynamic and presumably lighter GH.hybrid mpg was already leaked via code on their website site.
city 22
Highway 24
Combined 23
yes they are.Those definitely aren't the numbers that were leaked. The LC #s are on the Canadian website at 8.7 l/100km combined, unless there was something else recently.
lol, whats that minimum speed? According to posts from actual owners they're just not capable at that heavier higher towing spec.That's the cooling test. There's a very long uphill climb that they use for this. Minimum ambient temperature at a minimum speed and the vehicle must complete the climb with no temperature warnings. For downhill, I think they only check a stationary parking brake hold iirc.
I think this is very close to reality. I had a very lengthy interaction with ChatGPT about the hybrid vs non hybrid - compared to the tundra (I didnāt account for aerodynamics - too complex). It came out with 24 mpg with some generalized estimates.Those numbers seem very plausible. I've been comparing the Grand Highlander 2.4T AWD vs Hybrid Max AWD to get an idea of pricing, weight, and mpg differences between iForce and iForce Max. It's not a direct comparison because the hybrid systems are slightly different, but it's the closest comparison we have until the land cruiser MPGs are released. I'm not convinced the "leaked" 27mpg for the landcruiser is accurate when that is the rating for the much more aerodynamic and presumably lighter GH.
Grand Highlander Limited 2.4T AWD:
$49,460
20/26/22 mpg
265hp 310tq
4575 lbs curb weight
0-60 7.2s (C&D)
Grand Highlander Limited 2.4T Hybrid Max AWD:
$54,040
26/27/27 mpg
362hp 400tq
4920 lbs curb weight
0-60 5.6s (C&D)
TRD OR Premium 5' bed:
$53,195
19/23/20 mpg
278hp 317tq
4800lbs curb weight
0-60 7.0s (C&D)
My estimate based on this is that hybrid max will be ~$4k option when you factor in the 2400w inverter as well.
The highway fuel economy is not improved much by the hybrid max and the effect will be even more minimal with the Tacoma's larger A/T tires and aerodynamics. The weight increase of over 300lbs and slight increase in tire size will also dampen the city mpgs. 0-60 should be 1-1.5s faster with the biggest difference being off the line. That would put it at mid 5s 0-60. I think the biggest reason to get the iForce max will be for the off the line feel and the inverter. I don't foresee making that money back from fuel efficiency.