The interior of the 2004 Prius is significantly roomier
than the 2003 model. Passenger room measures 96.2 cubic
feet, up more than 6 cubic feet from the
2003 Prius. It's nearly 5 cubic feet roomier than the
2004 Civic
Hybrid's interior.
The back seats are surprisingly roomy. The 2004 Prius gains
a whopping 3 inches of rear legroom over the 2003 model.
It offers more than 2 inches more rear leg room than the
Civic and even beats the
Camry by an inch. In all but one dimension, the 2004 Prius betters
its predecessor; only rear seat headroom stays the same,
at 37.1 inches. Still, the new Prius is truly a four-passenger
car. It's five-passenger in designation only, or when one
of the rear seat occupants is much smaller statured than
the other two.
Cargo space is 16.1 cubic feet, more than one-third
larger than the 2003's 11.8 cubic feet and half again the
Civic's 10.1 cubic feet and coming perilously close to the
Camry's 16.7 cubic feet. The hatchback design makes the
cargo area much
more flexible than the Civic.
Seats are comfortable for commutes and short weekend
trips; like the car, their forte is not the multi-hour,
multi-state drive. The cloth upholstery looks durable and
is grippy, compensating somewhat for the minimalist bottom
and back side bolsters. Head restraints are adjustable in
all five seating positions, although in their lowered positions,
the rear seat's are close to dysfunctional for taller passengers.
The interior finish is up to Toyota standards, with pleasingly
close tolerances between body panels and interior plastic
pieces, and plastics that look and feel better than the
word plastic connotates.
The speedometer, fuel gauge, trip meter, and transmission
selection indicator are tucked into a long and flat, eyebrow-like
opening draped across and centered on
the top of the dash where it meets the windshield. In a
nod to the car's left-hand drive configuration, these are
located in the left half of the opening, albeit more toward
the centerline of the car than that of the driver.
The climate controls are managed via an LCD positioned top-most
in the center stack. This same panel displays user preferences
and maintenance needs and intervals. It also allows tracking
of the power and re-charging flows, monitoring battery and
gasoline usage, which is entertaining. It also serves as
the focal point for the navigation system, if ordered.
Directly beneath the LCD is the control head for the
sound system. Toyota deserves high praise for keeping the
stereo's most-used functions outside the onboard computer
system labyrinth and, equally important, for giving it buttons
and knobs that are easy to see, read and use. The base AM/FM/CD
6-speaker sound system is quite capable, while enjoying
the premium, JBL system to its fullest would benefit from
a bit more sound deadening in the floorpan and doors.
Remote switches for the audio, climate and cruise controls
are conveniently mounted on the tilt steering wheel. There
are two accessory power outlets. Dome lights grace the headliner,
front and rear. Both sun visors have illuminated mirrors.
These may seem small matters, but they distinguish between
value and cheap.
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A tall glasshouse yields exemplary outward visibility,
with one exception: Even a 6-foot tall driver can't see
the front of the car or the hood without leaning forward.
This is not good for navigating tight spaces or congested
traffic, precisely where the Prius is likely to spend goodly
amounts of its time. But that's the trend for many of the
latest aerodynamic designs.
Storage spaces are abundant and more flexible than in
some cars costing much more than the Prius. The glove box
is a two-parter, with an upper and lower bin opening like
a clamshell. The upper compartment is good for, yes, gloves
and
long, narrow items. The lower compartment holds bulkier
items. The front part of the center console opens up, also
clamshell-like, into two cup holders. There are door-mounted
map pockets, expandable magazine holders stitched into the
back of the front seat backs, and an unexpected, semi-secluded
storage bin below the stereo.
Two more cup holders pop out of the rear of the console
for back-seat riders. An armrest folds down out of the rear
seat back. The rear seats are split 60/40, each part of
which folds to yield an almost-flat floor, without having
to remove the head restraints. There are hidden spaces beneath
the cargo floor, both below and on top of the mini-spare.
Gas pressurized struts ease opening and closing the
hatchback. Raising and lowering the hood relies on good
old upper-body strength, however, and requires a supporting
rod when open. Doors close with a solid, if not truly impressive
clunk; then again, weight savings have to come from somewhere.