http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/volkswagen/up/86235/volkswagen-e-load-prototype-electric-van-review
Volkswagen e-load up! prototype electric van review
20 Mar, 2014  by Steve Walker

[images  
http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/volkswagen/86232/volkswagen-e-load-prototype-pictures
Volkswagen e-load up! prototype - pictures
]

We put a prototype version of Volkswagen’s e-load up! micro-van through its
paces on the road

For: Refinement, performance, low running costs

Against: Limited load space, potentially high upfront price

Verdict [4of5 stars]
If you can live with the modest carrying capacity and a range of 100 miles
then the Volkswagen e-load up! has real appeal. It’s fun driving experience,
stylish design and easy-to-use technology will be enough to convert many
electric vehicle doubters. The other major consideration is the cost,
however, and while this is a prototype that may or may not reach full
production, we do know that it wouldn’t be cheap if it ever did. The
Volkswagen e-up! is on sale at around £19,500 once the Government grant is
factored in, so it’s reasonable to assume the van version would come in at
similar money. That’s a Ford Fiesta van plus £7,000 worth of diesel and
faced with that decision it’s hard to see too many UK operators taking a
chance on an electric van.

Electric vehicles are here and they work, that much is not in doubt. The
barriers preventing electric cars and commercial vehicles taking off
commercially tend to relate to the practicalities of using them day-to-day.
If your normal usage patterns are right for an electric vehicle, those
barriers melt away.  

That’s the thinking at the heart of the Volkswagen e-load up!, a prototype
electric van based on the up! city car. Not only does it have an
all-electric powertrain with a maximum range of just 100 miles, because it’s
based on a city car measuring just over 3.5m nose to tail, it can also
accommodate just one cubic metre of cargo.

The small range and small carrying capacity in tandem would seem to limit
the appeal of the e-load up! to UK van operators but Volkswagen has built
prototype versions and is seriously considering putting the vehicle into
production. The reason being that for a small but growing number of urban
businesses a van like this could fit neatly with their usage patterns. 

For short trips in urban areas, particularly cities looking to kerb vehicle
emissions, the e-load up! could prove ideal. The limited storage space in
the rear is still enough to do the job for fast food deliveries, security
firms or couriers and the manoeuvrability inherent in the up’s city car
design will pay dividends too. That’s the theory anyway.

In the metal the e-load up looks the part. A full set of side windows and
proper opening rear doors make this van version very tricky to distinguish
from the standard five-door up! city car. There’s a badge on the back to
help you out though and if you gaze in through the darkened rear glass, a
mesh bulkhead presents itself behind the front seats.

Lift the boot hatch and the load space is probably bigger than you feared.
The maximum carrying capacity of 1,000 litres and a payload of 306kg are
comparable to other car derived vans like the Ford Fiesta and MINI Clubvan.
It’s quite an achievement considering the electric up! van is based on a
city car and has a battery pack secreted beneath its floor.

There are downsides to the load area though, predominately the narrow
opening and a high loading lip that will make teasing bulky items inside
difficult. The side doors also open as they would on a passenger version of
the up! but the prototype had a gap beneath the platform of the load floor
through to a redundant space that would have been the passenger foot well.

In the cabin, the e-load up! is a like-for-like reproduction of the
passenger car and that means clean, modern design with a strong air of
quality. The e-load up! feels a premium product as a result, from the
metallic door release catches to the glossy white trim and a sporty leather
steering wheel that could almost have been lifted from a Golf GTI.

Performance isn’t quite up to Golf GTI levels but the e-load up! does feel
nippy in that silent, surging way that electric cars have. Despite 200kg of
extra weight, the electric e-up! is the fastest model in the up! range and
the e-load up! version inherits that pace.

It will do 0-62mph in 12.4s and top out at 81mph but with 210Nm or torque
instantly available it feels far quicker than that over the crucial 0-30mph
increment.  

Driving the e-load up! couldn’t be easier. Turn the key to switch it on,
select drive and you’re away. You can notice the extra weight of the
batteries giving a very slight stodginess to the handling around town but
the turning circle is brilliantly tight and on the open road the electric up
actually feels more planted and stable than its lighter conventionally
engined equivalents.

The van’s range can be maximised by turning on the engine braking, which can
be set in one of three levels. This slows the car when you lift off the
throttle, using the recaptured kinetic energy to charge the battery.

It has the added bonus of enabling you to drive in town barely touching the
brake pedal, adding to the user-friendly feel of this little van. ECO or
ECO+ modes can also be selected which reign back performance and disable
some electrical systems to increase range. 

The e-load up! can be charged to 80 per cent of its battery capacity in just
30 minutes at a fast charging station. If you plug it in to a normal
domestic power supply it takes 8 hours for a full charge.

Key specs
    Length/width/height: 3540/1645/1477mm
    Engine: 81bhp electric motor
    Top speed: 81mph
[© Dennis Publishing]




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