Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Uneingeschränkte Zuverlässigkeit* (NHR)

*Absolute Reliability

My man did good. So good. He bought us a Prius: ) I finally got to see it today. I was going crazy all week. All I could do was read up on PriusChat.com and learn about these cars, and make a big ol' list of questions for our sales rep. Today he answered them all for me, and with the answers I wanted to hear too: )

I wish I had better pics, but the car is wedged in back of the dealership and I couldn't get the entire car in a photo. Oh well, in a few days it will be here.


Hypermiling Germany

Even before our yellow rocket car decided to destroy our trust in it, we had been hypermiling away. That is, beating the EPA MPG by driving very smoothly and coasting a lot. (And trying not to annoy other drivers at the same time.) We made it a contest - who can get a better MPG to display on the dash. (I always lose!)

Well I must admit I have enjoyed our yellow speed demon this week, taking it 160 kph, the speed this car achieves easily. It was made for the Autobahn. But we have been leasing it from my man's family, and the turbo started to act funny again and my man said "That's it."

I got that yellow car cleaner than it has ever been, inside and out, because my in-laws are *really* looking forward to getting it back. It is fun to drive, and getsa not-too-shabby 40+ MPG itself.

Reliability is top priority

I started looking at what cars are most reliable in Germany. I know the answer already in America. Japanese cars. But what about here? Is it different here? I had to read lots of German last week, looking at break down statistics and trying to find their version of Consumer Reports. There is a definite bias toward driving German cars here, no matter that they do not win the reliability contests. I get that. I am loyal to Chevrolet when it comes to trucks.

I made a list of my findings, which happily pointed us to Hondas again. Woo! My favorite. But, alas, they all use Benzin (gasoline). The only diesels are tiny things I would not feel safe in. And their hybrid is a "mild" hybrid and not a full hybrid. There went my hopes. But at the end of my research I found an article about the most reliable car, the Toyota Prius. As a joke, I sent the article to my man. I thought there is no way we can afford one. The article was called "Prius: Uneingeschraenkte Zuverlaessigkeit." I suddenly rememberd all the Prius taxis I'd seen in Seattle this summer. Entire fleets of them, and I read that they pass 100K mile tests with nothin' but oil changes.

Wishbone

Then I baked a chicken. In this chicken was a wishbone. I brought it to my man and he had no idea why I was sticking a chicken bone up close to him. I said, "What, you don't have wishbone wishes in Germany?" No they don't. So I told him to make a wish. I made mine. He won. "What did you wish for?" I asked.

A Prius. And last Monday he found us one! In blue. We so didn't want grey (which I consider to be the "invisible car" color, and dangerous).

(Note to self: Next time I bake a chicken and remove the wishbone, tell him to wish for a million dollars.)

He remembered driving my dad's Prius back home. He was enchanted by the electric engine taking over; the times you drive it purely on electric, with not a drop of gas being used. With hybrids, traffic jams are only a waste of time, not money. And best of all, the electric engine runs absolutely silently. Good for sneaking up on people.

I sat in it today and oh, how I love new car scent, which remained even though this car is used. (It has 44k km.)


The sales rep pushed the power button (keyless start!). In fact, you don't put a key in the door. The car recognizes the remote in your pocket, and unlocks when you touch the handle. A car that recognizes its driver, I love it.

I checked out the cup holders (4!) and they look big enough for *american sized* travel mugs! Ours does not have the built-in navi, *sniff* but we've got a handheld so that's OK.

The console images teach you how to drive it even more efficiently, showing a diagram of how the energy is transferred, with MPG for each mode of operation. Driving it becomes a game.

Sneaky

I can't wait to make people jump. That's what this car is good for, stealth mode. That fits my personality perfectly.

More pics to come, and ...uh, horse related posts too.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

My daughter has a Honda Civic hybrid and it does the stealth thing too - the only weird part is when it goes quiet as you're at a stop light you're not sure it's still on!

Formerly known as Frau said...

Congrats that is so cool! I miss having a car. Love the blue color can wait to see more pictures!

Melissa-ParadigmFarms said...

I love it, the wishbone wish came true, hee hee! I love the blue color.

AareneX said...

I had wondered if you were getting another car. (Jim was hoping you were getting a tractor)

How many hay bales does it hold?

Aunt Krissy said...

I was so wrong on the guess!

Unknown said...

How cool!!!

Did you hear that they are thinking of developing sounds for the hybrids because they are so silent, pedestrians don't hear them coming... then, bam!

Funder said...

I'm VERY happy for yall! But I really don't like silent cars; they're so dangerous :(

I'm sure you drive a reasonable speed (you must, if you hypermile), but all the people in S's area go whipping down gravel roads over hills and around turns at 50 mph. If I can hear them coming, I have plenty of time to get well off the road and call Cersei near us, but a hybrid would demolish me and Dixie and Cersei.

Can't wait to see more pictures of it! Love the new car smell :)

lytha said...

Kate, I didn't know the Civics did that too!

Frau, Thanks. Getting a car was one of those compromises my man made for his American wife.

Melissa, I was so shocked to see it, I love that color too and didn't expect it.

Aarene, when we are rich, we will have a tractor! How many bales? I hope I never know.

AK, WHEW!

Breathe, that is what my dad told me. He wants his Prius to be modified to sound like a Harley. Hm.

Funder, I considered going door to door to our neighbors with kids and telling them to tell their kids about our dangerous car, but then I realize I drive so ridiculously slow on our street. I mean, parking lot slow. I even annoy the neighbors themselves, I think, but I am doing it because there is a Slow-Children/Pets sign, and I respect that. My understanding is when you drive fast, the car makes noise. We'll see.

Leah Fry said...

Congratulations on your new blue baby! I want to see you pull a trailer with it.

allhorsestuff said...

HAHA Wishbone power!
Good on ya both!
KK

Unknown said...

congratulations! Hope we will see "das blaue Wunder" one time in Delmenhorst?!