I don’t know for certain, but my two biggest guesses would be cost or weight. Convertibles typically cost more than hardtops, and not because theyre sportier. The mechanism and parts for the convertible top cost much more than not having them. Theyre also much heavier than a hardtop.
The other consideration is space. Hybrids usually hide the battery behind the rear seat in the trunk. This is exactly the same place convertibles collapse the top into. If you have a battery there, you basically lose the entire trunk if you make it convertible.
Its not as simple as moving the battery to the floor. Hybrids use the same chassis as regular ICE cars, which are not designed like EV chassis. Designing it like this would defeat the whole purpose of making a hybrid. At that point you should just make a full electric.
I don’t know for certain, but my two biggest guesses would be cost or weight. Convertibles typically cost more than hardtops, and not because theyre sportier. The mechanism and parts for the convertible top cost much more than not having them. Theyre also much heavier than a hardtop.
The other consideration is space. Hybrids usually hide the battery behind the rear seat in the trunk. This is exactly the same place convertibles collapse the top into. If you have a battery there, you basically lose the entire trunk if you make it convertible.
So move the battery to the bottom like they do for electric cars.
I think not enough people ask for this feature, so they just continue with the already implemented design.
Its not as simple as moving the battery to the floor. Hybrids use the same chassis as regular ICE cars, which are not designed like EV chassis. Designing it like this would defeat the whole purpose of making a hybrid. At that point you should just make a full electric.
I agree, but Toyota doesn’t.