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Well, thanks for posting your message. It is indeed good to know that the car will continue to drive under EV power beyond running out of gasoline in the tank.
That was a question that several people had asked.

I think that our fuel gauge is reasonably accurate, as I filled up 9.6 gallons of gas when the tank was just a hair under 1/4 full by the gauge last Thursday, following one big road trip (we have only filled up once since bringing the car home full of gasoline from the dealership nearly 3.5 weeks ago, with the odometer now at about 800 miles). So whatever gauge problem that has affected non-Prime RAV4 users in recent years seems to not be a problem with my Prime, anyway.
 
After all the online discussions and debates related to the usable size of the Prime's fuel tank I took it upon myself to be the test case. The road trip home would be the perfect proving ground.

Let me know if you have any other questions about my experiment. Happy driving!
So I am presuming from the way that you worded this that you were many hundreds (thousands?) of miles from home when you picked up your new RAV4 Prime to drive it home. Is this correct? And that therefore you did not charge the car with an outside plug in any manner in that leg of the drive in which you ran out of gasoline in the thank?
 
On our 400-mile road trip today, we left home with a full tank. At more than 3/4 of the way, the "Fuel Low" warning sign came on in center instrument panel and could not be removed. The gauge still was a little above the Empty line. We stopped to fill up and got 11.4 gallons at the automatic click-off. It seems reasonable that we had 2-3 gallons left in reserve. This was our second fill-up since we brought the car home from the dealership with a full tank a little over 5 weeks ago (odometer reads about 1500 miles now). So it was 360 miles from home to fill-up, and we drove about 35 miles in all-electric-only in city driving. That works out to about 28.5 mpg for the "hybrid-driving" portion of our driving today -- not so good. Average speed about 70 mph for the "hybrid-driving" portion. But we didn't buy our Prime for the road-trip mileage but rather for the local all-electric driving (which makes up perhaps 90% of our driving in a year, as a function of number of days per year). So no complaints because 28.5 mpg is still way better than our ICE-only Highlander was getting on road trips. Just a comment that we are seeing nowhere near the 38-mpg-highway figures that seem to be mentioned a lot for the RAV4 Prime. Temps today in the 20s and 30s (Fahrenheit), so perhaps combined with the more-ethanol-laced winter fuels and the 70mph speeds, that could reduce us by 10 mpg?
 
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