Originally Posted by xBa380
My 18' Camry SE Hybrid which should get 43/46, I am down to about 33-35 MPG. Winter fuel, increase drag, colder temps for batteries, heaters, etc…. No good for the MPG. It's just crazy to be so far under the estimates… Any car I've driven before, even in winter, I would just be on the low end of the MPG range. Not 10 mpg under.
I've taken my car up to Tahoe this past weekend, the Bay Area/Sacramento was in the high-40s to mid-50s all week but it never got above 40 in in the Sierra Nevada foothills and it was in the 10s-20s on the north shore. Even though I have a roof rack for more drag, I just barely cracked 39MPG. That same trip I got 50+MPG in the spring time first time I've done it.
While I do have a coolant thermos to help with warm up, the PTC elements in the heater core and electric AC compressor were called upon to keep the cabin warm. And the hybrid battery was getting a workout going up Donner Summit.
My 18' Camry SE Hybrid which should get 43/46, I am down to about 33-35 MPG. Winter fuel, increase drag, colder temps for batteries, heaters, etc…. No good for the MPG. It's just crazy to be so far under the estimates… Any car I've driven before, even in winter, I would just be on the low end of the MPG range. Not 10 mpg under.
I've taken my car up to Tahoe this past weekend, the Bay Area/Sacramento was in the high-40s to mid-50s all week but it never got above 40 in in the Sierra Nevada foothills and it was in the 10s-20s on the north shore. Even though I have a roof rack for more drag, I just barely cracked 39MPG. That same trip I got 50+MPG in the spring time first time I've done it.
While I do have a coolant thermos to help with warm up, the PTC elements in the heater core and electric AC compressor were called upon to keep the cabin warm. And the hybrid battery was getting a workout going up Donner Summit.
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