"Gotta love that torque; a real scooter", lets you sling about with abandon.
The back seat's a joke, with less space than a picnic basket,
so cramped even the kids will yowl. Styling is an acquired taste

http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/columnist/healey/2013/10/03/test-drive-electric-chevrolet-spark/2918883/
Test Drive: Electric Chevy Spark a powerhouse
James R. Healey  October 5, 2013

[images  / AJ Mueller, GM
http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981000-01-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
The electric version of Chevrolet’s Spark mini-car is a powerhouse — bet you
didn’t see that coming

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/10/04/1380908406000-XXX-2014-Chevrolet-SparkEV-069.jpg
The electric version of Chevrolet’s Spark mini-car is a powerhouse — bet you
didn’t see that coming

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981001-02-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
It’s comfy if you’re in front. Seats are well-formed and controls and
instruments are about where they ought to be

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981002-03-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
Spark’s a minicar, a little bigger than a Fiat 500. The gasoline models are
priced about 58% of the EV, so it’s hard to imagine you’d save enough on
fuel to pay the difference

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981003-04-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
Electrics are rated differently from other cars, but the government says
Spark EV will go 82 miles on a full charge, and has mile-per-gallon
equivalent ratings of 128 mpg in the city, 109 highway, 119 mpg-e in
combined city/highway driving; uses 28 kilowatt-hours per 100 miles

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981004-05-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
Hop in, push the ignition switch, pull the lever into gear and away you go.
You find yourself waiting to hear the engine start. Nope. It’s a motor, and
it’s ready to rock the moment you are

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981005-06-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
The Spark EV can charge up to 80% in 20 minutes with optional SAE Combo fast
charger

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981006-07-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
South Korean models pose next to a Chevrolet Spark EV at the Seoul Motor
Show in March 2013.  Chung Sung-Jun, Getty Images

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981007-08-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg

http://www.gannett-cdn.com/media/USATODAY/USATODAY/2013/09/24/1380044981008-09-Chevrolet-Spark-EV.jpg
Connectivity was fully integrated via Bluetooth, no wire connections needed
]

Story Highlights

    Spark is powerful with as much torque as a Hemi V-8 lets you sling about
with abandon

    The styling is, at best, an acquired taste

    The interior is quite pleasant in front, very cramped in back

As much torque as a Hemi V-8, less rear-seat space than a picnic basket, an
absurdly high price unless you qualify for all the "eco" credits.

But the Chevrolet Spark EV, on sale since June in California and Oregon, has
a premium feel that we didn't notice in the gasoline model. No doubt the
extraordinary sling-about go-power of the EV put a higher-level patina on
the whole car.

Spark's a minicar, a little bigger than a Fiat 500. The gasoline models are
priced about 58% of the EV, so it's hard to imagine you'd save enough on
fuel to pay the difference.

And you're not really the green hero you might imagine. While there's no
exhaust emission from the car, you've tapped into the utility company's
power grid to recharge, and nearly half the electricity flowing on that
grid, on average, is generated by generators burning coal.

Juice is cheaper than gasoline now, but if electrics catch on, the price of
power will rise with increasing demand. That's because the grid's about
maxed out, and it's very expensive to add more power plants. Carried to
extremes, it's fair to argue that your EV raises my electricity bill.

But how is the Spark EV as a car, a drivable thing that gets you here and
there? Pretty sweet, actually.

First, it's simple. Hop in, push the ignition switch, pull the lever into
gear and away you go.

Second, it's comfy if you're in front. Seats are well-formed and controls
and instruments are about where they ought to be.

Third, the buggy flat goes, at least once it's rolling a couple miles per
hour. The one-speed transmission isn't a gem for zooming away from a dead
start, but the 400 pounds-feet of torque the electric motor has is instantly
available and slings the Spark EV forward delightfully once underway. Chevy
quotes 0 to 60 mph in 7.6 seconds. We bet it could be 6 seconds or less if
there were a transmission with low gearing to get rolling.

Fourth, Chevy parent General Motors does in-car electronic connectivity
linkup very nicely. The MyLink setup (shared with the gas version of Spark)
made fast and faithful friends with Test Drive's too-hip Windows phone.

The connection is fully integrated via Bluetooth, no wire connection needed
(unless you want to plug into the 12-volt outlet to charge). All phone
controls are available via the car controls. When playing phone tunes, the
screen in the center of the dashboard shows title and artist, whether the
music is stored on the phone or piped in via the phone's Pandora
application.

The Chevy allows switching tracks and adjusting the volume via the dashboard
— things you have to do on the phone instead of the car in some lesser
system. Picking up the phone to find another song is a driver distraction
that Spark avoids.

It's enough to make Ford Sync owners weep.

What you might dislike about an otherwise appealing little go-buggy:

Hooking up the charging cable. Minor, but more work than stuffing a gas
nozzle into the fuel filler. The fat electric cord used by 240-volt chargers
is stiff and kinky and unpleasant to coil up when out of use. Almost always
dirty, too, because it drapes along the ground to reach your car.

Short range. Well, 82 miles, government rated, is in the ballpark for
mainstream electrics, but unless all your miles are home to work and back,
you're going to start feeling that "range anxiety" they talk about.

Driving highway-fast, with lights and climate control operating, we burned
off 1.3 miles of indicated battery range for every mile driven. That was a
thirsty surprise. The kick-it-and-go suburban driving we did took only about
0.9 of a mile of range for every mile driven.

Back seat. So cramped for knee and leg space that even the kids will yowl.
The head restraints are terrible, too. They'll drop down when unused to
improve rear visibility, but that wrenches the head and neck of the people
who hop in and forget to raise them. Once raised, they often hit the skull
at just the wrong spot.

It's more practical to have a back seat than not, but Spark's is an
impractical back seat, at best.

Styling. If you hate how it looks, of course, you wouldn't buy it in the
first place. But if you're on the fence, be warned that the stumpy,
truncated appearance seems like a car trying to emerge from the industrial
equivalent of a photo zip file, and not quite making it. Reasonable people
often disagree on matters of taste, so you might think Spark's eye candy.

Most telling? In a driveway full of appealing machines, including BMWs,
which car did we take for that midnight milk run, and fast hop to pick up a
prescription? Spark EV. Easy to use, small enough to park almost anywhere.
And, yum, wonderfully powerful.

We hope GM decides not to limit it to California and Oregon much longer. The
world at large needs a shot at an EV that'll blow the doors off some
sporting machines. The sooner we make this fuel-saving business a joy ride,
the sooner we'll have a lot of converts.

CHEVY SPARK DETAILS

What? Electric-power version of Spark four-door, four-passenger, front-drive
minicar.

When? Went on sale in California and Oregon mid-June. Sale in other areas
under consideration.

Where? Made in South Korea using U.S. drivetrain.

How much? $27,495, including $810 shipping for 1LT base model. Similarly
equipped gasoline version is $15,820.

Up-level 2LT test car, which has different upholstery and steering-wheel
trim, is $27,820.

Some EV buyers qualify for as much as $7,500 in federal tax credit.
California gives $2,500 credit. Lease is $199 monthly for 36 months, $999
down.

Most owners will spend another $1,000 or more for a 240-volt charger to cut
the long recharging time using the standard-issue 120-volt charger.

What makes it go? Electric motor rated 130 horsepower and 400 pounds-feet of
torque, driving front wheels through a single-speed transmission.

How big? About 5 inches longer, an inch narrower than a Fiat 500. Maximum
cargo space, 23.4 cubic feet.

How thirsty? Electrics are rated differently from gasoline, diesel and
hybrid models. Government says Spark EV will go 82 miles on a full charge,
and has mile-per-gallon equivalent ratings of 128 mpg in the city, 109
highway, 119 mpg-e in combined city/highway driving; uses 28 kilowatt-hours
per 100 miles.

Test car observations: Full charge showed range of 82 to 85 miles on
instrument panel. High-speed highway driving used 1.3 miles of range for
every mile driven. Vigorous suburban driving used 0.9 mile of range for
every mile driven.

Trip computer showed overall power consumption of 24.4 kwh per 100 miles.
According to government nationwide averages, a kwh is about 13 cents,
equating to $3.17 in electricity per 100 miles.

Gasoline Spark is rated 32 mpg in combined city/highway, or 3.13 gallons per
100 miles. At $3.40 a gallon, a recent nationwide average, the gasoline
Spark would use $10.64 in petroleum fuel per 100 miles. That's nearly 3.4
times the cost of electricity to go as far.

Overall: Gotta love that torque; a real scooter. Back seat's a joke. Cheaper
fuel cost can't erase higher purchase cost.
[© Gannett 2013 usatoday.com]




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Here are today's archive-only EV posts:

EVLN: London, Luton, Leicester and Leeds are 'lectric-linked
EVLN: $15k Insecta, low-cost 4wheel 1seat leaning EV
EVLN: Self-driving Leaf EV granted license in Japan; is Canada next?
EVLN: Tesla-S' most insane in-EV touchscreen multimedia system ever
EVLN: Tesla building a Cincinnati, OH store
+
EVLN: Spark EV, Made in S. Korea using U.S. made drivetrain

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