This article was first published in 2005.
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So it’s been lots of work and there have been a helluva lot of problems to
overcome along the way – but now, finally, what’s the turbo Prius like on the
road?
In a word – fantastic.
The turbo NHW10 Prius now has better
than standard fuel economy. And performance? Well, the key aim has been
realised – country road hill-climbing performance has been completely
transformed.
Fuel Economy
On an open road cruise at 100 km/h, the turbo Prius will turn in a best
economy of about 4.6 litres/100km
[21.7
km/litre, 61.4 miles per imperial gallon, 51.1 miles per US gallon]. In the
same conditions, the dead standard car used to get about 6.3 litres/100 km
[17 km/litre, 5.9 litres/100km, 48 miles
per imperial gallon, 40 miles per US gallon], so the modified car has
improved the fuel economy in these conditions by up to 28 per cent!
However, that’s a very best case scenario.
In a mixture of some urban, a fair amount of open road cruising at 110 km/h, and
some steep country road hill-climbing (in other words, my most frequent driving
mix), the economy now averages 5.5 litres/100 km
[18.2 litres/100km, 51.4 miles per imperial
gallon, 42.8 US miles per gallon]
. In the same driving conditions it used to
be 5.7 litres/100 km
[17.5 km/litre, 49.6
miles per imperial gallon, 41 miles per US gallon], showing that there’s
been an improvement of 3.6 per cent.
It’s hard to make a comparison in heavy traffic urban driving, because
economy varies so much with the conditions. However, a best economy of about 4
litres/100 km
[25 km/litre, 71 miles per
imperial gallon, 59 miles per US gallon] can now be gained in these
conditions. I don’t remember previously ever seeing economy that good.
And it needs to be kept in mind that’s all achieved in a car with comfortable
seating for four adults (it’s a very roomy cabin for the size of the car), and
having dual airbags, climate control, excellent NVH, etc. In other words, it’s
not a small, poorly riding economy box with a screaming engine.
Why the hell are the fuel economy figures being quoted is so many units?!
There’s a good reason: in Japanese domestic NHW10 Prius models, the display is
in kilometres per litre. In Australian models, it’s in litres/100km. In the
US, in miles
per US gallon.
And well, after all of those, we thought we’d better include miles per Imperial
gallon as well!
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Performance
As mentioned earlier in this series, the Achilles Heel of this NHW10 domestic
Japanese model is the lack of open-road performance when the high voltage
battery is short-term exhausted – as happens after full-throttle has been used a
lot. Without the additional electric motor power then being available, the
performance is miserable. In fact, up a very steep open-road test hill, the
full-throttle performance at the top could drop as low as 47 km/h, and was
typically only about 50 km/h. But with the turbocharger, the Prius can
consistently top the same hill at 86 km/h – an absolutely incredible 70 per cent
improvement in real world open-road performance.
But what about the car’s quarter mile and 0-100 km/h times? Well, while improved, the gain is nothing like as great as the lift in hill-climbing performance. What happens is that the hybrid control system acts in such a way
that the peak combined power of the electric motor and the petrol engine is not
substantially increased. In other words, total peak power is not much changed
over the best it could previously ever be.
Part of the difficulty in describing the performance change is because the
Prius Power Split Device varies engine revs according to speed and throttle
position. So to reach peak engine power (as measured by the airflow meter signal), the
car needs to be travelling at over 100 km/h at full throttle. At anything less
than about 100 km/h, full throttle makes use of the typically much improved
mid-range power. (It’s improved because there’s always plenty of electric power
available.)
That’s why dropping the boost from 7 psi to 5 psi at high loads makes little
difference to normal on-road performance – in fact, it’s hard to even tell the
change. But drop 3 or 4 psi of boost in the mid-range - and then climb a steep
hill - and the engine can immediately be felt revving harder to generate enough
power. And after only a short time of this (eg 30 seconds), Myrtle the Turtle
will come on indicating that the high voltage battery is down in level... .and
then performance is just woeful. With the turbo boosting the mid-range by 7 psi,
Myrtle is completely banished.
But there’s no getting away from it – even with the turbo, the petrol engine
is still a low powered one. On the freeway at 110 km/h, the level of turbo boost
varies from 0-2 psi – the engine is working much harder than you would expect in
a conventional car. On extremely steep grades (eg marked at 18 per cent!) the Prius still struggles...although
then, so do lots of other low-powered cars.
NVH
Amazingly, noise, vibration, harshness are now improved over standard. This
is primarily because with the greater mid-range torque produced by the petrol
engine, the ‘gearbox’ keeps engine revs lower for a given power output. So
instead of engine revs flaring loudly at each small hill, the car now just
torques its way up with engine revs and noise both much lower.
When the front undertray was off the car, some intake noise from the large
airbox could be heard, but with the tray back in place, this is inaudible. There
may – may – be a slightly deeper
exhaust note on the overrun, where the injectors are switched off and the engine
is freewheeling, but from inside the car, the new exhaust is otherwise dead
quiet.
Outside, the exhaust has a deeper note and the turbo can be very faintly
heard whistling-up – those noises overlay the (also faint) whistling/whine of
the electric motor and power converter and the normal sounds of the combustion
engine. From inside the car, about the only time you can hear any performance is
at full throttle at higher speeds, where the engine makes a muted growl.
Conclusion
To achieve modification results on such a complex car that include superior
fuel consumption and vastly improved open-road performance are very satisfying
results.
The upshot is that the Prius drives exactly like a turbo factory NHW10-model
Prius would. There’s no added induction noise, no blow-off valve noise, no
exhaust noise. There’s no rush of boost as the turbo spools-up, no change in the
sensitivity of the electronic throttle, no increase in vibration or harshness.
Instead, the car is punchier in urban cut and thrust, and much more powerful
when being driven hard along a sinuous and hilly country road. Drive it
everywhere at full throttle and fuel consumption is far poorer than standard,
but drive it normally and the fuel consumption is a little better than standard – the
consumption depends entirely on the mood of the driver. Having said that, it's rare not to get 750 kilometres out of a single 45-litre tank...
In short, all the criteria for improved open road driving performance without
a severe overall fuel economy penalty or poorer NVH have been met.
The raison d’etre of the Prius can
be summarised in these words: fuel economy and emissions. The designers aimed at
making it the most fuel-sipping, cleanest car in the world.
And despite the addition of the turbo, maintaining these characteristics was
near the top of the priority list.
As discussed in the main text, the turbo Prius is often more economical than standard. Its
emissions in nearly all driving conditions are the same as standard (using a new
cat converter and staying at stoichiometric air/fuel ratios) but it must be
admitted that at high loads, the richer than standard air/fuel ratio that is
used results in higher hydrocarbon and CO outputs (although lower NOx).
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Summary of Turbo
Modifications:
- Turbo
- ex-Subaru Liberty twin turbo IHI RHF4
- Fabricated
exhaust manifold
- GFB
recirculating blow-off valve
- Fabricated
intake and intercooler plumbing – 2 inch and 1.75 inch mandrel bent
- Turbo
oil and water cooling lines
- Intercooler
- ex-diesel Pajero air/air
- 2-inch
exhaust – 2 inch cat, 2-inch resonator, ex-Corolla rear muffler
- Airflow
meter – original sensing element in larger body
- Airflow
meter electronic interceptor – Digital Fuel Adjuster kit
- Intake
airbox – Falcon XR8
- Fuel
supply system – in-tank pump, external pump, two pressure regulators, solenoid,
one-way valve, two control relays
- Decrease in high load boost using a solenoid-controlled bleed on BOV pressure line via Simple Voltage Switch working off airflow meter signal
- Engine 'on' signal provided for 30 seconds after boost event via a modified Simple Voltage Switch working on hybrid ECU 'full air con request' input
- One heat range colder Iridium spark plugs
- Electronic
switching of oxygen sensors and fuel pressure via the Simple Voltage Switch kit
working off airflow meter signal
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So How Does it Compare?
So what are the different Prius models - and how does the turbo’d one
compare?
The NHW10 model was released in Japan in late 1997.
The first model Prius sold outside of Japan was the NHW11 model, which looks
much the same as the NHW10 but has some significant underskin changes.
The current model, the NHW20, has both a new body and even more significant
driveline changes, although the fundamentals remain the same.
So is the turbo NHW10 now a match for the current model NHW20? The short and
blunt answer is: it’s not even close.
The NHW20 gets to 100 km/h in about 10 seconds, helped hugely by its
near-doubled (at low speeds) electric motor power. The turbo NHW10 takes 14
seconds (see, told you it was still slow in standing start times!).
The NHW20 also shows superior fuel economy to the turbocharged NHW10,
although this is a much closer contest. In fact, on a cross-country haul of the
sort I did in an NHW20 (see Toyota Prius: Across a Continent)
the economy sat for – at times – hundreds of kilometres at 5.3 litres/100km, a
figure I am sure the turbocharged NHW10 could equal. (In fact, I would be hopeful
of high Fours.)
But, as impartially as I can, the following table shows a comparison of the
vitals.
Model |
NHW10 |
NHW11 |
NHW20 |
NHW10 turbo |
Engine Power (kW) |
43 |
53 |
57 |
55? |
Electric Power
(kW) |
30 |
33 |
50 |
30 |
0-100 km/h(seconds) |
16 |
13 |
10 |
14 |
Japanese 10-15 test fuel
economy* |
km/l |
28.0 |
29.0 |
35.5 |
- |
litres/100km |
3.6 |
3.4 |
2.8 |
- |
mpg (Imp) |
79 |
82 |
100 |
- |
Mpg (US) |
65 |
68 |
83 |
- |
Typical on-road fuel economy |
km/l |
17.5 |
19.2 |
21.2 |
18.2 |
litres/100km |
5.7 |
5.2 |
4.7 |
5.5 |
mpg (Imp) |
49.6 |
54.3 |
60 |
51.4 |
Mpg (US) |
41 |
45.2 |
50 |
42.8 |
(* apparently there was an NHW11
mid-model update that resulted in the 10-15 economy test figure improving by 6.9
per cent. Note: the Japanese 10-15 mode fuel economy test is notoriously
optimistic compared with real world fuel economy)
So hell, if in performance the turbo’d NHW10 is still slower than the
standard NHW11 and NHW20 models, and in economy it’s often no better, why didn’t
I just go buy a current model – or even an Australian-delivered NHW11 – and save
myself the trouble?
Well, one really good reason is cost. The JDM Prius cost me only AUD$12,500.
Add the turbo, fuel pumps, etc (which is hard to cost because fitting all this
stuff also earns me money!) and you might add another $3000. I am still way
ahead of a locally-delivered NHW11 (at about AUD$22,000) or a current model
NHW20 (AUD$35,000 secondhand).
However, clearly I’d like to apply the turbo technology to a current model
NHW20. Perhaps one day I will...
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