Drm919
Well-known member
I was hoping going from 3.5 L to 2.4 L Turbo would give a nice boost in mpg but maybe only 2-3 better depending on trim. Hybrid may be 6-8 better but how much more $$$ for hybrid?
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Yep, do the math carefully, as for many drivers there is no long-term cost savings going to a hybrid unless one keeps it many years, then you are faced with the expenditure of a battery replacement in the neighborhood of $6K. In fact, you may be helping Toyota more than yourself, i.e. for them to meet federal MPG and emissions requirements.I was hoping going from 3.5 L to 2.4 L Turbo would give a nice boost in mpg but maybe only 2-3 better depending on trim. Hybrid may be 6-8 better but how much more $$$ for hybrid?
no one is buying an iforce max for mpg. Itās a performance hybrid.Yep, do the math carefully, as for many drivers there is no long-term cost savings going to a hybrid unless one keeps it many years, then you are faced with the expenditure of a battery replacement in the neighborhood of $6K. In fact, you may be helping Toyota more than yourself, i.e. for them to meet federal MPG and emissions requirements.
Better performance with less emissions, the latter dictated by the feds.no one is buying an iforce max for mpg. Itās a performance hybrid.
the added few MPG is just a nice extra.
which in no way bothers me.Better performance with less emissions, the latter dictated by the feds.
Agreed. Without a new powertrain Tacoma woudnt even be my initial list, let alone the short list.I actually would've been less inclined to get this new Tacoma if they didn't kill that gutless, thirsty V6 engine they previously had.
Anybody still bitching about gas prices in the US should go take a trip anywhere else in the world that isn't a developing country, rent a car and pay for fuel for a week or two. Our fuel prices on average are right in the middle of the pack globally. It's hard to find lower priced gas than we have outside of the middle east.A lot of folks are really underwhelmed by the MPGs in both the Tundra hybrid V6, and the announced Tacoma non-hybrid. The truth is gas prices aren't as compelling in the US as we pretend they are--or remember them being. Toyota knows that, and knows Americans are more inclined to base their purchase on performance than efficiency. Gas prices today are near what they were in 2008, when new vehicles were about 45% cheaper (mostly due to inflation). In terms of cumulative cost of ownership, fuel has been halved.
Gas prices aren't climbing any time soon either. There are multiple global geopolitical shitstorms that are encouraging the US to stay the top global oil producer. Mandating emissions standards seem to be a much more politically expedient means to reduce emissions, and is less visible at the register.
Ain't the US average like $3/G? I'm paying $5.56/G here in Canada, it's.... greaaaatAnybody still bitching about gas prices in the US should go take a trip anywhere else in the world that isn't a developing country, rent a car and pay for fuel for a week or two. Our fuel prices on average are right in the middle of the pack globally. It's hard to find lower priced gas than we have outside of the middle east.
https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/gasoline_prices/
According to that list average price in the US is $3.45 a gallon compared to $4.69 a gallon up there in America's hat. You've got more room to complain than anybody in the US but there are still around 90 some countries that have higher gas prices than you do. You're still under the global average of $4.90 per gallon in Canada so I can't imagine most people in the world have a lot of sympathy for you.Ain't the US average like $3/G? I'm paying $5.56/G here in Canada, it's.... greaaaat
I'll definitely bitch about that all day long. I remember paying under $1/L years ago, sad world it's becoming.