Prius Bastard
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All Comments (82)
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Toyotas are for mexican, teenage female drivers that hits the car in every parking lot, has never heard of an oil change and that doesn't imagine how the fuel moves a car. and the Prius is for american teenage female drivers that are a bit more stupid and with more cash, and they actually think they are going to do something for the planet.
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Seriously, I would much rather be driving my 1995 Dodge Neon Highline which got up to 42 MPG and could go 0-60 in 6.5 seconds. I bought it brand new and put 250,000 miles on it before selling it to a pizza delivery guy.
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TOYOTA SUCKS BALLS!!! I drive a Camry so I know.
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@AUSTiNKiNSER Well also population density is an issue there, not like Montana or western Kansas where it's 50 miles to the next town, so and time of day you could achieve that without worrying about traffic isn't as often. And I just looked at the 115 mph video, not sure if you're doin quite 115 but i'm not sure if the speedometer there uses GPS or wheel rotation to determine speed, sometimes when it gets up there there's noticeable discrepancies between the two.
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@NGAllAmericanBadass Okay, one, did I ever say that I drove that fast... IN WEST VIRGINIA?
Two, yes you can. There are plenty of parts on 119 South (the interstate I drive on in West Virginia) where it's flat with no curves. Not for long though, but there are.
Two, look at my videos, my 2010 Prius does easily 115mph. The second generation does 108mph, and the gen one barley broke 102. Though the Prius wasn't built to be a race car, it's easily capable of over 100mph.
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@AUSTiNKiNSER yeah i call BS on that to be honest, there's no way you can drive 100mph in a prius in that part of the country. Freeways aren't flat or straight enough in that par of the country.
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@NGAllAmericanBadass I promise you that the Prius doesn't regularly get 36mpg. We've had Prius' (Prii?) since they first struck U.S. shores in 2000. Driving from Illinois to West Virginia to see family, averaging around 75-80mph, in some spots over 100, and still get 47mpg overall. That's in our 2010 Prius. The second generation, which is the 2004-2009, at the same speeds, averaged overall about 43-46mpg, and the first generation (2001-2003) got around 40.1-43mpg.
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@AUSTiNKiNSER That's if you drive in the most conservative way possible, if you drive regularly 36 mpg is a reasonable estimate on the mileage on a tank of fuel.
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I don't think Nissan got the message
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Strange, the Prius gets 50 mpg, not 36. It has 8 standard airbags, not 6. Hmm.
@99gsx4g63t explain? you didn't get it? letsss see. i drive a car that gets 25mpg; meanwhile a prius has an average of 50 mpg. if the prius drives twice as much as i do he would consume the same amount of fuel; given that same time period.
racoonpooon 1 year ago 8
Toyota is better
zoklo666 2 years ago 8