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http://www.nytimes.com/2014/01/05/automobiles/autoreviews/electric-service-from-199-a-month.html
Electric Service From $199 a Month
By JIM MOTAVALLI  January 3, 2014

[image  / Chrysler Group
http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2014/01/05/automobiles/05electric-slides-slide-K3EQ/05electric-slides-slide-K3EQ-articleLarge.jpg
Cute, but Not Precious: The Fiat 500e, Chevrolet Spark and Smart
Cabriolet, three tiny battery-powered urban runabouts, aren’t just fun,
they’re fairly affordable

http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2014/01/05/automobiles/05electric-slides.html
slide show
]

Electric cars are getting cheaper. Although purchase prices vary, the
Chevrolet Spark E.V. and Smart Electric Drive Cabriolet can be leased for
three years at $199 a month, and the Fiat 500e at $239. That means consumers
are likely to weigh factors other than the bottom line when deciding which —
if any — of these small, stylish battery vehicles to put in their driveway.

The good news is that none of them are terrible. But would a pure electric
vehicle meet your needs?

If your family has only one car and takes long trips, a plug-in hybrid like
the Chevrolet Volt would probably be a better choice. But if you simply want
a fun car for frugal, eco-friendly commutes, one of these may be worth
considering. Federal and state incentives can sweeten the deal.

But public charging stations are not yet widely available, and the cars are
offered in only a few states. All three are sold in California; two are also
offered in at least one other state that follows California’s zero-emission
vehicle rules.

Here are my impressions after recent test drives in all three cars:

Fiat 500e: California Dreaming

This electric Fiat is, alas, a California-only model, though the car’s chief
engineer, Brett Giem, said distribution might expand to other states. Based
on reactions to the test car, both to its buglike body and electric orange
paint — officially called Arancio Elettrico — and to its sleekly retro
two-tone interior, there would be takers elsewhere. This car is seriously
cute; a readout bids you “ciao” when you shut it down.

The 500e is fun to drive, too. Like most battery electrics, it has great
low-end torque — what you feel when you floor the accelerator — and takes
off with the alacrity of a Venetian gondolier catching up to paying clients.
Its 111 horsepower is 10 more than the gas version of the 500, and the
weight is distributed more evenly, front to rear. Other cars passed me left
and right on the highway, but high-speed Interstate travel isn’t the 500e’s
forte.

The Fiat is comfortable for front-seat passengers, even tall ones, but it’s
hard going for anyone (including children) stuck in the rear. The steering
is sharp and the suspension is relatively stiff, though not unpleasantly so.
The push-button shifter reminded me of my 1963 Dodge Dart. The view ahead is
fine, but the center roof pillar partly blocks rear vision.

Over nearly 100 miles of combined city-highway driving, I got the
electric-car equivalent of 121.3 m.p.g. (quite close to the E.P.A. rating of
116 m.p.g.e). That translates into 3.6 kilowatt-hours per mile or a
respectable 79.9 miles per charge based on the available energy from the
battery pack. The 500e has well-designed graphic displays to keep track of
consumption and the state of charge, and also, like the other cars, a
smartphone app.

I don’t have a 240-volt Level II home charger, and my garage outlet refuses
to charge E.V.’s, so for all three vehicles I used the included 110-volt
cable and snaked an extension cord into my kitchen. That got me enough
charge for my needs.

In California, the $7,500 federal tax credit, $2,500 state rebate and $2,000
manufacturer’s incentive combine to make a serious dent in the $32,600
purchase price. You might be able to drive it away for $20,600.

Chevrolet Spark: Young at Heart

For my 17-year-old daughter Delia, this car was love at first sight. She
liked everything about it: the size, the light blue color, the quiet
electric operation. That bodes well for sales to a generation that, in many
cases, would rather text than drive.

Like most people, Delia is accustomed to Chevys being larger than this one;
the Spark is bigger than the Fiat, but not by much. And like that car, the
Spark coddles its front-seat passengers but is less kind to those in the
rear. The cargo area is tiny, and there’s no spare tire, only an inflation
kit.

The 140-horsepower Spark, on sale since June, was also impressive off the
line, with light steering and a well-damped ride that improved on the Fiat
and Smart. With 400 pound-feet of torque, the Spark can zip from a
standstill to 60 m.p.h. in less than eight seconds, and it held the road
nicely. I simply loved to drive it around town.

There’s lots of body-color-painted metal inside, but the interior doesn’t
look cheap, and everything fits together well. With an eye on those
techno-savvy young buyers, the Spark also came with a sophisticated MyLink
infotainment system that quickly got jazz playing from my iPod. As in the
500e, colorful displays keep the driver apprised of the state of charge and
the remaining range. The display also guided me to a charger four miles
away. 

 The E.P.A. rates the Spark E.V. at a combined 119 m.p.g.e. I averaged 3.8
miles per kilowatt-hour, and based on the available energy in the
lithium-ion battery pack, that translated to about 72 miles of range
(compared with the E.P.A. combined rating of 82). I’m a bit of a leadfoot,
so you’d probably do better if you drove more judiciously, less if you make
generous use of the tempting Sport mode.

For $750 more, the Spark offers the recently approved SAE “combo” plug,
which means you can connect to either a 240-volt Level II charger or to a
480-volt Level III for fast charging (which can get you to roughly 80
percent of battery capacity in 20 minutes, compared with a seven-hour charge
time with Level II).

It’s too bad the Spark is available only in California and Oregon. It costs
$27,495, but the federal incentive gets that to below $20,000. The $199
lease price requires (like the Fiat) a $999 down payment.

Smart Cabriolet: Sunny Disposition

Unless I’m missing something, Smart offers the only battery-powered
convertible in the country, which may explain its growing popularity in
Southern California. Of course, Fiat offers a 500c Cabriolet with a folding
top similar to the Smart’s, but the car isn’t available as a plug-in model.

The styling of the two-seat Smart Fortwo is getting dated, but the E.D.
version features a nice interior with well-executed net pockets and tachlike
pods showing the overall state of charge and battery pack performance. The
placement of the ignition switch on the floor is reminiscent of Saabs and
requires a period of adjustment. The car is tiny, but so tall I could have
driven it wearing a top hat. Dropping the snugly fitted power top (with
glass rear window) is simple — buttons control its two-position ascent and
descent.

The 110-volt charger, with a bright yellow accordion cable, stores neatly in
a case built into the fold-down tailgate. If you’re in a hurry, a button
ramps the charging up to 12 amps, from eight.

With only 47 horsepower in ordinary use — though capable of 74 horses for
short bursts of power — the Smart gets left in the others’ dust. And it
responds lazily to the accelerator. But like the Fiat, the Smart drives
better than its gasoline-powered twin, and it’s quicker, reaching 60 m.p.h.
from a stop in 11.5 seconds (instead of 12.8). The floor-hinged brake pedal
has a lot of travel, and the ride is rock-hard. Uneven pavement really
jostles this car, which is a shame because it handles well and its steering
is taut.

The Smart offers menus with statistics on electric performance, but they’re
crammed into a small screen under the speedometer, with monochrome amber
displays that recall computer monitors from the mid-1980s. The information
might be easier to decipher if incorporated into the more modern
infotainment screen.

For the uninitiated, the Lilliputian size of the Smart — any Smart — takes
some adjustment, but nosing it into half a parking spot (and turning it
around in my driveway) was a pleasure. Outside of my local library it
attracted a few onlookers, but one of the librarians, Linda Quinn, had a
concern: “It’s adorable, but I’d be afraid a Suburban would crush it.”

The E.P.A. rates the Smart E.D. at 107 m.p.g.e. in combined city-highway
driving and its range at 68 miles. I didn’t do that well in mostly
around-town driving; 2.6 miles per kilowatt-hour over 102 miles translates
to just 46 miles of travel on a charge. My car’s performance may have
suffered from a lot of top-down driving, along with use of the heater and
radio, not to mention my heavy accelerator foot. Compared with the two other
cars tested, the Smart E.D. is widely available: You can buy one in
California, Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New
York, Oregon and Rhode Island. The $199 lease price (with $2,493 due at
signing) is for the Cabrio; the fixed-roof Coupe E.D. can be had for $139 a
month.

The Cabriolet purchase price is $28,750, but incentives are available. An
$80-a-month Battery Assurance Plus rental program, covering maintenance and
guaranteeing performance for up to 10 years — with full replacement if
defective — is included in the lease deal.

Other E.V. Alternatives

Someone seeking a small E.V. has other choices. The Nissan Leaf is widely
available, starting around $30,000. before incentives. BMW’s i3, an
up-market city car with an optional range-extending gas engine, will be
available in the spring for $42,275, as will a new generation of the
Mitsubishi i-MiEV. The Honda Fit E.V. is available in some East and West
Coast markets, with a compelling $259 a month lease deal that includes a
home charger.

Ford makes an electric Focus, and the Mercedes-Benz B-Class Electric Drive
goes on sale next summer.

Of the three tiny cars I tested, all had virtues. But in a head-to-head
comparison it was the very lively Chevy Spark over the eye-catching Fiat
500e by an electron, with the Smart a good choice for intimate fun in the
sun on an unhurried timetable.
[© 2014 The New York Times]




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