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If you bought again today... Hybrid or EcoBoost


  • Total voters
    362

Master Blaster

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I currently have a 23 Hybrid, and would get another in a heartbeat. Realistically it gets double the mileage and is much smoother driving. The low-stress engine will easily go 500k and the transmission 8-10x as long as the EcoBoost. Even the weak C/V joints will go a lot further due to the smoother torque application. The extra cost will amortize in under 2 years for most owners. It's a no-brainer.
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tiktokbrainrot

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Gasser.

The Hybrid at work was much slower then the ecoboost, the 25+ improve upon this and will handle better then the old hybrids because the AWD isnt that horrible Torsion beam, but the Boost is still faster, the hybrid still runs out of steam at 30 MPH, and the Boost still plays like Ford's version of the GTI, but with a bed. Plus the AWD hybrid you have to baby to get the real good MPG, drive it like a normal car and it's not all that impressive. This is doubly so for the AWD hybrids, their MPG without being very careful with how your drive has been really dissapointing IRL.

The Boost is also a lot easier to service for DIY repairs. The Hybrid transmission is a royal PITA to service by comparison, and the hybrids still have a lot of electrical gremlins that the boosts seem to mostly avoid.

That being said one with the stronger 8f57 transmission so we could push 300+ HP out of them would be sweet. There's a recipe there for a legit Maverick RS.
 

MysticalMan

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I have the hybrid and I am currently towing a 5X8 uhaul trailer 600 miles @ 75mph with no problems.

If I had to do it again I would go with the hybrid.

Before I drove a 2017 Fusion Hybrid and I can definitely notice a huge difference in performances between the two.

They finally got it right with the Maverick.
 

Propane Burning Man

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I would get the hybrid again. Gas here today at Costco is $4.96. Only place under $5. I have my fingers crossed that Farley is smart enough to have an extended range EV option on the new EV PU. Ford hasn't really told us much about this new EV PU, so it is a lot of speculation at this time. If you have been following the Scout development, then you know the preorders coming in are 85% for the EREV. It's a no brainer. Around the world EREV sales are booming. I am not interested in a standard plug in EV. ✌
 

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Edge Haley

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Have had both EcoBoost and Hybrid....definitely will be getting AWD Hybrid as next pickup...Put the Hybrid in SPORT mode and it is a very peppy little truck....And you can not beat 43-48 Miles per Gallon in the Hybrid...No Contest!!! Hybrid is saving me roughly $150 a month in gas. I drive from Georgia to Montana to the Lewis and Clark trail very summer and keep it on cruise control set at 75-80 mph and still get high 40's+ mpg.

I buy gas so infrequently - I have to pull out the manual to find that gas tank button.

Hybrid is gas fill up is once a month but my EcoBoost was every week...because it was a temptation to drive a little quicker...if the EcoBoost was a straight shift I would have been a little tempted to keep it, but quicker vehicles without a manual shifter took away the fun.

But I'll hold on to this Maverick a few more years...since it will cost me $10,000 more to trade-in to add AWD compared to the price I paid for current XLT in Dec 2021. Bought July 2021, weeks after the Maverick was released - XLT, with comfort package, sunroof, and paid $27,400+taxes.
 
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Glen Baker LLC

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Honestly curious after a few years of ownership now…

If you were buying a Maverick again tomorrow, would you still go Hybrid or would you switch to EcoBoost?

The more I look at it, the more it feels like both drivetrains have their own tradeoffs and neither is the “perfect” answer anymore.

Hybrid:
• Better MPG obviously
• eCVT seems simpler long-term to some people
• A lot of owners reporting 40+ MPG consistently
• AWD + 4K tow now available
• But also had its fair share of recalls/electrical complaints/battery weirdness over the years

EcoBoost:
• Definitely feels quicker and stronger especially at highway speeds
• 250 hp / 277 tq vs 191 combined hp on the Hybrid
• Better for towing and people who actually load the truck often
• Easier to mod/tune
• But turbo + 8 speed long-term reliability debates come up constantly too

What surprised me most is the actual acceleration difference isn’t even THAT massive anymore depending on setup. Some testing had the newer AWD Hybrid around high 6s to 60 while the EcoBoost/Lobo was mid 5s to low 6s.

Then there’s the reliability arguments:
• Hybrid owners say the naturally aspirated 2.5 + eCVT is the safer long-term setup
• EcoBoost owners say the Hybrid has had more recalls/software/electrical issues
• Some people say the 8 speed is the bigger concern
• Others say modern hybrids become nightmares outside warranty

And honestly I still see people arguing both sides nonstop.

So after ACTUALLY owning one:
Would you buy the same drivetrain again or switch?

And why?

(Pic for attention )

file_000000002b18722fb9f26666e406445b.webp
You should add a 📊 POLL📊 to this thread.
 

icegradner

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Hybrid, no way I'm dealing with a small block turbo and it's gas guzzling habit. I'm not Max Verstappen or Jeff Gordon so I don't go to the track, I don't tow a 2000+ pound trailer, so I have no need for that kind of power. Mostly drive on city streets or low speed rural roads, so not having the hybrid would just be tossing my money to gas executives and saying, here have another bonus on me. :LOL:
 
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Chops

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If the Maverick Hybrid had the 2.0 EB instead of the Atkinson (Lincoln Nautilus Hybrid) - I might be tempted to switch from my Lobo. But the eCVT instead of the quick shift 7 speed auto with paddle shifters would temper the temptation.

My Corolla Hatch had a CVT with paddle shifters that made driving more fun.
 

Cancunbadlands

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Man up and get an ecoboost!
Who cares about gas prices
What's the money you make for!
 

Pointyears

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Agreed,
I guess losing 19 BILLION DOLLARS on
the F-150 Lightning wasn't Enough for Ford 🤷‍♂️
Now they're going see how much they can lose on the next EV.
Reminds me of a saying.
"doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results is the definition of insanity"
In this case, I prefer "We'll lose money on every unit, but we'll make it up in volume."
 

Pointyears

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If the Maverick Hybrid had the 2.0 EB instead of the Atkinson (Lincoln Nautilus Hybrid) - I might be tempted to switch from my Lobo. But the eCVT instead of the quick shift 7 speed auto with paddle shifters would temper the temptation.

My Corolla Hatch had a CVT with paddle shifters that made driving more fun.
You made me look up to see exactly what advantage an Atkinson gives:

Why do most hybrid automobiles (thinking of the ford maverick in particular) have Atkinson gas engines?

> Most hybrids use **Atkinson-cycle gasoline engines** because hybrids can let the gas engine focus on what it does best: **efficiency**, while the electric motor fills in what the Atkinson engine is weaker at: **low-speed torque and quick response**.
>
> The Ford Maverick hybrid is a good example.
>
> ## What an Atkinson engine does differently
>
> In a normal gasoline engine, the intake valve closes relatively early during the compression stroke.
>
> In a modern Atkinson-cycle engine, the intake valve stays open longer. Some of the air/fuel mixture is pushed back into the intake tract, so the engine effectively has:
>
> - a **shorter compression stroke**
> - a **longer expansion/power stroke**
>
> That lets the engine extract more energy from the burning fuel before the exhaust valve opens.
>
> In plain terms:
>
> > The engine squeezes the mixture less than it expands it.
>
> That improves thermal efficiency.
>
> ## Why that helps fuel economy
>
> An Atkinson-cycle engine usually has:
>
> - better fuel efficiency
> - lower pumping losses
> - reduced heat wasted out the exhaust
> - improved part-load efficiency
>
> This is especially useful in everyday driving, where engines spend much of their time at light or moderate load.
>
> ## The downside: less power and torque
>
> The tradeoff is that an Atkinson engine generally makes **less torque and horsepower for its displacement** than a conventional Otto-cycle engine.
>
> Because some intake charge is pushed back out, the engine effectively acts smaller than its physical size during compression. That means less cylinder pressure and less immediate torque.
>
> That would be annoying in a regular gas-only vehicle.
>
> ## Why hybrids make Atkinson engines work well
>
> A hybrid solves that weakness with the electric motor.
>
> The electric motor provides:
>
> - instant low-speed torque
> - smooth launch from a stop
> - extra power during acceleration
> - torque fill when the gas engine is operating in its efficient range
>
> So the gas engine can be tuned for efficiency instead of maximum low-end grunt.
>
> In the Ford Maverick hybrid, the 2.5L Atkinson-cycle engine works with the electric motor and eCVT-style hybrid transmission. The system can use electric assist when needed and run the gas engine in more efficient operating zones.
>
> ## The hybrid system can also shut the engine off
>
> Another advantage is that the hybrid system can turn the gas engine off when it is inefficient to run it, such as:
>
> - stopped at a light
> - creeping in traffic
> - low-speed parking-lot driving
> - light-load conditions where electric drive is enough
>
> That makes the Atkinson engine’s efficiency even more valuable when it is running.
>
> ## Why not use a regular Otto-cycle engine?
>
> A conventional Otto-cycle engine would usually make more power for the same size, but it would use more fuel under many conditions.
>
> In a hybrid, the total system performance comes from both the gas engine and electric motor, so Ford, Toyota, Honda, and others can choose a more efficient but less punchy engine without making the vehicle feel too weak.
>
> ## Bottom line
>
> Hybrids often use Atkinson-cycle engines because they are **more fuel-efficient**, and the electric motor compensates for their weaker torque and response.
>
> For a vehicle like the Ford Maverick hybrid, that combination gives good city fuel economy, smooth driving, and adequate performance without needing a larger or thirstier conventional engine.
 

Ryom

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If I wanted neck snapping acceleration I wouldn't buy either vehicle. Given the narrow performance gap of both, I'd stick with the hybrid and hop on my motorcycle if I felt the need for speed.

Just an FYI, I'm currently driving a 2026 Audi A3 S-Line Sportback that is slower than both Mavericks. MPG is slightly better than a carefully driven hybrid Mav but it sure handles and rides better 😄

https://www.topgear.com/car-reviews/audi/a3-sportback/driving

Still prefer my Mav over the Audi 🙂
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