Prius goes for more energy-saving firsts
Toyota deploys several new tech tools in third-generation car
![]() Toyota The photovoltaic solar panel on the roof of the Toyota Prius generates electricity that runs a cabin vent fan to cool the interior on hot, sunny days. |
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Time was when all the Prius had to do to stand apart from other new cars was to show up. Launched in Japan in 1997 and the United States in 2000 as a 2001 model, it was the first practical car with a fuel-sipping hybrid electric drivetrain.
Yes, Honda’s original Insight was also available back then, but that model was a claustrophobic two-seater that felt more like a contender in a collegiate fuel economy contest than a real, everyday car. But hybrid technology is so widespread now that it spans the market from frugal fuel misers to the massive Cadillac Escalade NBA image-mobile. Having been first a decade ago doesn’t really matter anymore.
Recognizing that first-ness is a perishable commodity, Toyota has deployed an array of new technologies in its latest third-generation Prius aimed at cementing its appeal to the electron-heads who comprise a core constituency of the car’s fan base.
Some of these features ought to do it. How about automatic steering? The Prius can not only parallel park itself, using the Intelligent Parking Assist feature, it even steers at highway speed, when the Lane Keeping Assist system helps keep the car in its own lane by turning the steering wheel.
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Toyota The LED low-beam headlights of the 2010 Prius use 17 percent less energy than high-intensity discharge lights, Toyota says. |
For the lane assist, the car will apply slight corrections, but doesn’t do much real steering.
Left to its own devices, we found that it would, within a couple corrections, begin to bounce from one side of the lane to the other at too great an angle for the system to correct and the car would barge into the adjoining lane. At least the Lane Departure Warning system is there to announce when that happens.
Then there is automatic braking. The Prius uses the same forward-looking radar employed by the automatic cruise control system to keep an eye out for obstacles in the path of travel. If it spots one, the system issues a warning to the driver and it automatically tightens the seatbelts in anticipation of a possible crash.
If the driver hits the brake pedal, the computer instantly applies maximum braking force to shorten the stopping distance and try to prevent a crash. But if the driver does nothing, the computer automatically applies some braking force in a bid to reduce the force of impact.
Ideally, one day, cars will be permitted to automatically stop themselves short of impact, but automakers’ fears of legal liability in the event of a crash prevents them from offering such brake systems.
Not all of the Prius’ gadgets are related to transportation. In a nod to comfort, the car features an optional solar roof panel that uses the sun to power cabin vent fans that keep the interior from reaching oven-like temperatures in the summer.
If that isn’t cool enough for the sensitive driver, there is also remote control air conditioning. Toyota made the Prius' air conditioner electric, like a home unit, rather than running it off a fan belt so that it can run even when the car’s gas motor is shut off. So it was a simple step to let drivers run the air conditioner when they aren’t even in the car. That means that a press of a button on the remote key fob will provide three minutes of cool air to the cabin before the driver gets in it.
And when the sun sets, the Prius still has cool widgets to fascinate technophiles. In addition to the now-commonplace LED taillights, the Prius is available with LED headlights.
Yeah, they only save 17 percent of the power used by high-intensity discharge low beam lights, but they look awesome, and punks in tricked out 10-year-old Honda Civics cannot attempt to duplicate their appearance with silly colored bulbs from Pep Boys, as they have done with HIDs.
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