Currently reading: New Toyota Prius grows up
More space, more power and better economy for the third-gen Toyota Prius hybrid

The third-generation Toyota Prius hybrid is getting the finishing touches before its debut at the Detroit motor show next January. It will go on sale in the UK late next year.Sources say that the new hybrid will be larger than today’s car but still be recognisable as a Toyota Prius. Crucially, though, it will be greener and better to drive than today’s globally successful model.The hatchback will be about 10cm longer and 3cm wider than today’s car and, to cope with the bigger size, the engine will move up from 1.5 to 1.8 litres. Power should increase to 100bhp.Toyota says it can achieve this higher output while still improving economy and lowering emissions. Sources in Japan claim that Toyota is aiming for a 12 per cent improvement in fuel consumption, leading to a combined economy of over 70mpg and C02 emissions of just over 90g/km.Toyota’s trademark hybrid system will be more tightly packaged and efficient, ensuring that the car is able to run longer on pure battery power.At launch the Prius will stick with the current style of nickel metal hydride batteries, but the ‘smarter’ style of lighter, high output lithium-ion batteries may arrive by 2010. The first plug-in versions of the Prius are likely to go on limited release at the same time.The Prius hatchback pictured here will be part of a range of hybrid models that Toyota intends to launch to with a Prius badge.One of these could be a minivan based on the Hybrid X concept from Geneva 2007.

Peter Nunn

 

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NiallOswald 15 May 2008

Re: New Toyota Prius grows up

James Read wrote:

NiallOswald wrote:
You should have said 'It is' then. 'Its', in the sense of 'belonging to it', makes no sense in your original usage.

Ahem...."...possessive or OTHERWISE".

You best get in touch with this lot then: http://www.apostrophe.fsnet.co.uk/

I quote:

Apostrophe Website wrote:

The rules concerning the use of Apostrophes in written English are very simple:

1. They are used to denote a missing letter or letters, for example:

I can't instead of I cannot
I don't instead of I do not
it's instead of it is

When you said 'Its quelle surprise', what you meant was 'It is quelle surprise'. When making a contraction the apostrophe is used. From dictionary.com:

"It's

1.contraction of it is: It's starting to rain."

Which bit to do contest? That you meant 'it is' or that the apostrophe is used when making a contraction?

The Colonel 14 May 2008

Re: New Toyota Prius grows up

The Toyota Prius is quite possibly the worst car I have ever driven...and I learned to drive in an 850cc Mini with string holding the doors in place!

I had one on hire for a week last year. Not only is it a ghastly car to drive, the gearbox is in a different time zone, the stop-start function was annoying and poorly refined, the seats felt like 30 year old armchairs, passengers felt ill (might have been an aesthetic reaction though), and was not particularly economical when compared to the 318d I had on hire a few weeks later, driving on the same roads in the same conditions and was an immensley far more capable car to drive, if not exactly the best itself.

It does have a big boot though.

Oh yes, and the Sat-Nav felt the need to tell me each and every time I went from France to Monaco to France to Monaco to France to Monaco, as I descended a twisty road into Italy...HA! not really, Monaco. Very annoying.

ordinary bloke 14 May 2008

Re: New Toyota Prius grows up

scamper wrote:
Another potentially interesting thread in which JJBoxster holds court, goes off on one regarding several unrelated topics, and abuses everyone who does not agree with him
Would it be possible for everyone to just ignore JJB's posts and not even comment on them ? He should be left alone to rant and rave in his own little world. which I believe is what most children really enjoy.