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- #31
I get your point….Round trip for the week of work is like 12 milesI had a '22 Hybrid that I replaced with a '24 Eco and yes, you do need to drive differently if you want to get the maximun mileage benefit. To do that you need to stay in electric mode as much as possible on short trips. There are dashboard indicators that you can display to tell you when you are in electric or gas mode. Once you cross over to gas you lose the benefit and the best way to get back to electric is to ease off the pedal and slow down to stay in that zone.After awhile you get used to managing that more consistently, but there is a learning curve.
It sounds like you drive about 450 miles a month. For cost benefit I would suggest you determine how much of that is city driving for short trips. For those miles figure you would get 10-12 miles more per gallon with a hybrid. If 250 of those miles are city and you stayed mostly in electric it would take about 7-8 gallons as opposed to 11 gallons with the Eco or around 3.5 gallons a month or around 42 gallons a year. Is that cost savings worth it is the question. Most of my driving is in town but when I do take longer trips I love the extra power of the Eco when I need it and it is more enjoyable to drive. I figured the Eco would cost me around $150-$200 a year more in gas annually and for me it was worth it. Test drive a hybrid and have the sales person show you how the gas/electric display works. If you drive the hybrid the same way you would an Eco you will not get much benefit. Good luck.
Week getting grandson at school when bad weather about 10 miles max
Running daughter to work for the week maybe 10 miles with that too for the week
Weekly or bi weekly a 30 mile round trip for groceries
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