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Toyota Highlander Hybrid Driving Tips & Tricks

428 messages,  Last post on Oct 16, 2009 at 6:44 PM

You are in the Toyota Highlander Hybrid Forum. Your Host is pf_flyer

What is this discussion about? Toyota Highlander Hybrid, Fuel Efficiency (MPG), SUV


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#361 of 428
Re: Battery Drain in Traffic [desertfox1] by terry92270
Aug 23, 2006 (2:03 pm)
Reply

Replying to: desertfox1 (Aug 23, 2006 12:56 pm)

That "idiot" would be the porters, driving them at a very rapid rate onto the ship for transport, off again at the POE, typically Long Beach, California, and then again onto a train or trailer for transport to the dealership......and then off the trailer, onto the dealers lot.
 
Then still more "idiots" drive them through the dealers car wash, fuel them at a nearby gas station.
 
Then even more idiots, buyers, like you, me, test drive them.
 
That is where those miles came from, and just who those "idiots" were....
#362 of 428
Re: Battery Drain in Traffic [desertfox1] by cdptrap
Aug 23, 2006 (2:24 pm)
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Replying to: desertfox1 (Aug 23, 2006 12:56 pm)

The "Bars" is the battery graphic in the NAV's Energy Flow Diagram. Arrows flow to and from the battery. Full 8 bars turs it green, 6 bars turns it blue, 2 bars turns it pink.
 
The "no arrow" thing is just a recent discovery so we are having fun trying it. Not convince it is really worth doing all the time. There are other ways of making sure the battery maintains a strong charge when we come to a stop. The strong charge allows us to start moving again on eletric.
#363 of 428
Re: Battery Drain in Traffic [jbollt] by cdptrap
Aug 23, 2006 (2:35 pm)
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Replying to: jbollt (Aug 23, 2006 11:03 am)

It took our HH past 10K miles before we accidentally discovered we could do the no-flow thing. It works only on a good reasonably flat surface.
 
We are not sure if it is useful for the HH because there are other ways of getting a good strong charge when we come to a stop. The strong charge lets us move off on full electric when traffic allows. The rest of the time, we just maintain power in the zebra region and the drive computer takes care of the rest.
 
Just for fun, to do this no-flow thing:
 
1. First we work the accelerator to achieve full-electric mode. Remember to get on a long flat stretch.
 
2. Slightly easing the accelerator just a hair. The NAV diagram will likely show the battery turning off and Regenrative Braking charging the cells. THis tells us we just found the two end-points.
 
3. Now we gently press the accelerator, not as far down as #1 but just a hair further than #2. Somewhere in there, the flows stop and the car just rolls.
 
It takes a very light sensitive touch and not easy for me to achieve so I do not do it muh. It is fun to try and practice when we happen onto a stretch of flat road.
 
As Terry said above, don't obssess over this like me, I am just doing it for fun .
#364 of 428
Re: Battery Drain in Traffic [cdptrap] by terry92270
Aug 23, 2006 (3:17 pm)
Reply

Replying to: cdptrap (Aug 23, 2006 2:35 pm)

I wonder if a sail, something rigged to go through the sunroof, might improve mileage?
#365 of 428
Re: Battery Drain in Traffic [terry92270] by cdptrap
Aug 23, 2006 (4:58 pm)
Reply

Replying to: terry92270 (Aug 23, 2006 3:17 pm)

A sail and lower trap doors so I can put all the children and adults in the car to work pushing it . I think the host may come down on us soon .
#366 of 428
Re: Battery Drain in Traffic [cdptrap] by terry92270
Aug 23, 2006 (5:06 pm)
Reply

Replying to: cdptrap (Aug 23, 2006 4:58 pm)

Like Bedrock! Excellent idea!
 
Insofar as the "Hosts"....I am sure they keep in mind a sense of humor is better than flaming. You're a good sport, CDPTrap.
#367 of 428
Re: Battery Drain in Traffic [terry92270] by kirstie_h HOST
Aug 24, 2006 (5:35 am)
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Replying to: terry92270 (Aug 23, 2006 5:06 pm)

Silence, insolents!
 
(Just kidding... how could we work here without a sense of humor?)
#368 of 428
Re: Very Technical Questions [carz89] by typesix
Aug 24, 2006 (11:42 am)
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Replying to: carz89 (Aug 14, 2005 9:08 pm)

10. Linear fuel gages
  Many fuel tanks have odd shapes to them, making a linear fuel gage hard to come by. You are used to the uniform shapes seen in liquid storage tanks such as in a power plant.
#369 of 428
Re: Very Technical Questions [typesix] by terry92270
Aug 24, 2006 (12:43 pm)
Reply

Replying to: typesix (Aug 24, 2006 11:42 am)

LOL....
 
A reply, even if almost a year later, is better than none!
#370 of 428
re "No Flow" by shilohlady
Aug 24, 2006 (6:11 pm)
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I think that the concept of "No Flow" arrows is more worthwhile if you live in flat areas. I live in Colorado and never worry about recharging my battery - no matter where I'm going, I'll always have several periods of at least a gentle downslope and, in some cases quite steep. The battery recharges rather than using my brakes too much so I just let that take care of itself. I do try to stay in "EV" mode as much as possible, again because I know I'll get the regen, but those inevitable uphill slopes usually put paid to that too.
 
Purchased last August, already at 30K miles, lifetime MPG is 27.8 - I get 29.5-30 easily in the warmer months, winter kills that. (manually calculated - I have the base model without any average mpg display)

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