This might be a dreadful admission to make, but until late December, I’d never driven a Toyota Prius. It’s not that we’ve ignored the hybrid in our coverage, it’s just that it has always been someone other than me driving it. To rectify that error, I spent a week with a 2020 Prius Prime Limited, the $33,500* range-topping plug-in version of the car that, for a while, was a synonym for being environmentally conscious.
Not a huge amount has changed in the two years since Ars last drove a Prius Prime. It’s still a plug-in hybrid EV with a 1.8L, four-cylinder internal combustion engine under the hood that generates 95hp (71kW) and 105lb-ft (142Nm). The internal combustion engine uses the more efficient Atkinson cycle; this delays closing the intake valve until the piston is already moving back up during the compression stroke, meaning that it compresses less volume than gets expanded subsequently in the power stroke. As a result, the engine has a thermal efficiency of about 40 percent, which is better than just about any other engine outside of Formula 1 or Mazda’s Skyactiv-X engine.
The internal combustion engine is joined by a 71hp (53kW) permanent magnet synchronous electric motor, the two working together to drive the front wheels through a continuously variable transmission, for a total system output of 121hp (90kW). (Beware, purists: the internal combustion engine can directly drive the front wheels when it’s more efficient to do so.) The battery pack is an 8.8kWh lithium-ion unit weighing 265lbs (120kg) giving the Prius Prime a range of up to 25 miles (40km) on electric power alone. Recharging is just via AC power and takes about two hours with a 240V source or five hours connected to a 110V socket. The EPA rates it at 133mpge or 54mpg on gasoline alone.
If only you could drive farther in electric silence
The point of a PHEV like this is to plug it in each night at home, and were I in a position to do that, I might only have heard and felt the gasoline engine fire up on steep hills or when I engaged “power mode.” In practice, since I don’t have anywhere to plug in a car, that meant quick electricity top-ups when grocery shopping or the like, and so I rarely started the day with anything approaching a full battery. In rather cold December weather here in the District of Columbia, I actually recorded closer to 45mpg over the course of a week that involved a decent mix of low-speed urban errands and a couple of longer trips with some freeway action.

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