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Shadoweb

First time Hybrid buyer

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Well Waldo, I get to pop your balloon here. Blocking off the grill does in fact increase the ICE running temps. When I had the BD, the major complaint I had was NO heat at highway speeds, the ICE WT would barely touch on 160*. After covering the upper and lower grills, the ICE WT jumped up to 180* and stayed there, and I had HEAT in the cabin. When driving the Hybrid at highway speeds of 55-60 (Rural Highway, not Interstates), and switching between EV and ICE, the cabin heater pulls so much heat from the ICE, that if you dont block the grill, the WT drops dramatically, I saw up to 40* swings on the Scan Gauge, so when ICE did kick back in, it had to warm itself all over again to become efficient. I would watch the WT drop to 120* or lower, and after making the cover, the temp dropped no more than 10* in EV. By blocking off the input of cold air into the engine compartment using foam or a plastic cover, it helps to trap that heat, so the ICE doesn't have to make up for heat loss as much as it has to without the covers.

 

Those of us who block the grill are not doing it for aerodynamic reasons, we are doing it to trap as much heat as we can in cold weather. It makes a marked improvement in MPG as well as comfort.

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Waldo, that is so true on the BD, however i saw no improvement in FE in that car with or without the grill blocking. It did help get some heat in the car though. I did see a marked improvement in my current car when the grill was completely blocked off and having all but the top row blocked off. That little bit of opening is enough to cause a faster cool down than with it entirely blocked off. I drove the car for a week or more with no blocking in 40 and below temps and did see that the MPG was lower then than it is with it completely blocked off. In any case, the biggest thing for me personally is that the cabin warms up faster with the grill blocking than with out it, by as much as 10 minutes faster.

 

On that "other" car, I questioned the t-stat several times and was assured it was working. Who the heck knows what was wrong with it and I am so glad to be rid of it. Other than a couple cosmetic things and the Titanium seats being not as comfy as the SE Luxury ones, I have had no complaints on my current one. My wife has been driving it now for all of February and has pretty much killed the gas mileage in it, last night I drove it briefly and it was at 38.7. Ouch. Best I got last night was 35, but it was a short drive to the train and back, so 35 is not bad considering it was frozen.

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You may have not gotten to the right menu to reset the lifetime mileage. I see the car is a 2013 so it probably has 10's of thousands of miles on it. Unless the lifetime mileage ( called "Log Term Fuel Economy" in my 2010, a completely different car ) is reset periodically, it becomes set in stone. I reset mine at 10,000 mile oil changes and towards the end of that interval, it only changes tenths of mpgs even with a big driving change. That's the mathematical nature of averaging. It can change very rapidly at the beginning of the interval.

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