Hi,
My fail-over vehicle has been a 2010 Prius but I've had to use it three times, June for 10 days, September for 2 days, and December 19 days, due to repairs on our 2014 BMW i3-REx. Had another BMW i3-BEV or REX been the loaner car, I probably would not have cared. But the BMW loaners, ordinary gas cars, were not good and I had to revert to the 2010 (Gen-3) Prius. Worse, the BMW i3-REx had spoiled me for long distance driving using dynamic cruise control which our 2010 Prius does not have.
I have the BMW warranty to January 2019 but repair times, parts delays, and the in traffic failure of the motor mount bolt, has made me uneasy about the long-term prospects. Add to that the potential cost of tires from a single source, these bother me as in 2019 I'll be fully retired.
Had the plug-in Prius Prime been available in May 2016 for the price I just paid ($28.4k - $4.5k Federal credit,) I would have gotten the plug-in Prius Prime instead of the BMW i3-REx ($29.9k end-of-lease.) Comparing the specs:
I still have the parts to double the BMW i3-REx gas range from ~80 mi to ~160 mi but I've lost interest in risking the BMW warranty until January 2019. I would rather deal with the plug-in Prius Prime limits than the risks of the BMW i3-REx.
Bob Wilson
My fail-over vehicle has been a 2010 Prius but I've had to use it three times, June for 10 days, September for 2 days, and December 19 days, due to repairs on our 2014 BMW i3-REx. Had another BMW i3-BEV or REX been the loaner car, I probably would not have cared. But the BMW loaners, ordinary gas cars, were not good and I had to revert to the 2010 (Gen-3) Prius. Worse, the BMW i3-REx had spoiled me for long distance driving using dynamic cruise control which our 2010 Prius does not have.
I have the BMW warranty to January 2019 but repair times, parts delays, and the in traffic failure of the motor mount bolt, has made me uneasy about the long-term prospects. Add to that the potential cost of tires from a single source, these bother me as in 2019 I'll be fully retired.
Had the plug-in Prius Prime been available in May 2016 for the price I just paid ($28.4k - $4.5k Federal credit,) I would have gotten the plug-in Prius Prime instead of the BMW i3-REx ($29.9k end-of-lease.) Comparing the specs:
- BMW wins: 72-80 miles EV vs 22-25 miles
- Prius Prime wins: +52 MPG vs 40 MPG and losing ~20% SOC at 75 mph
- Prius Prime wins: +600 miles range vs 150 miles
- Equals: dynamic cruise control and collision avoidance
- Prius Prime wins: 15" common tires vs 19" one vendor
- BMW wins: city handling turn radius and acceleration vs larger, lethargic Prius Prime
- Prius Prime wins: midsize car vs subcompact
I still have the parts to double the BMW i3-REx gas range from ~80 mi to ~160 mi but I've lost interest in risking the BMW warranty until January 2019. I would rather deal with the plug-in Prius Prime limits than the risks of the BMW i3-REx.
Bob Wilson