http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1099653_little-i-miev-electric-car-how-does-it-compare-to-vw-e-golf
Little i-MiEV Electric Car: How Does It Compare To VW e-Golf?
By Bengt Halvorson  Aug 20, 2015

[images  / Doug Berger, NWAPA
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2016 Mitsubishi i-MiEV Quick Drive

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Portland OR  -  July 2015

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2015 Volkswagen e-Golf  -  Long-term test car

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The 2016 Mitsubishi i-MiEV is an outlier—in design, in layout, and in the
way it drives. Yet our long-term 2015 Volkswagen e-Golf is nearly the polar
opposite—a full battery-electric model wearing the look, feel, and
functionality of one of the world’s best-selling cars of all time.

As we mentioned this past week in a drive report of the i-MiEV, Mitsubishi
was one of the leading-edge offerings in a fledgling electric-vehicle market
four years ago—and it seems that during four years the market’s expectations
of how an EV should be packaged, and how it should perform, have changed
considerably.

If you’re relatively new to electric vehicles, we recommend that you click
through our reviews of the Volkswagen e-Golf and 2016 Mitsubishi i-MiEV at
our companion site, The Car Connection. But based on our recent short drive
of the 2016 i-MiEV and our several months already with the e-Golf, here are
several key differences (other than pricing, which is an obvious advantage
of the Mitsubishi) that small-car fans and EV enthusiasts are likely to see
between the two:

2016 Mitsubishi i-MiEV

Packaging and seating
There couldn’t be a more pronounced difference in how you sit and ride in
these two vehicles. In the i-MiEV, short-and-upright seats give you a high
vantage point but lead you to feel like you’re sitting on the bulk of the
car. Those short cushions aren’t all that comfortable, either—especially for
taller drivers—as they tend to focus all the pressure on sit-bones and none
on thighs. You’d better feel comfortable with your passenger, too, as you’ll
be nearly bumping shoulders (as the i-MiEV is considerably narrower than
most other U.S.-market small cars). And the steering column is fixed. The
e-Golf, on the other hand, has great, supportive seats, with longer
proportioning that gives far better support for one’s thighs and back.
There's more adjustability, too, in multiple ways. You sit lower in the car,
for sure, and while that means visibility isn’t quite as great, you
instantly get a better feel of the e-Golf’s handling and cornering
capability.

In back, both of these models are closer—and the Mitsubishi might even have
the advantage, surprisingly. In the i-MiEV, we’ve found the back seat to be
better-proportioned than the front seats, in some respects, and barring the
same narrow feel, there’s lots of headroom and reasonably good legroom. In
the Golf, there’s good space in back, but the door cuts and low-set front
seats make getting in and out, and wedging feet underneath, quite a bit more
difficult.

Interface
The Volkswagen e-Golf, like most modern electric cars—whether they be
‘compliance cars’ or higher-production-volume affairs, gives you lots of
readouts. It keeps you posted on your energy use, and lets you keep tabs on
your driving style. On the other hand, in the i-MiEV, there are no
information screens or in-depth efficiency data; instead, while there is a
sweeping power gauge, range and trip information is relegated to a tiny LCD
display that you click through with an old-style odometer peg.


2015 Volkswagen e-Golf - Long-term test car
Driving modes

And then, perhaps more importantly, there are the driving modes. In the
i-MiEV, a ‘B’ mode on the gated shifter gives you far more regenerative
braking—and essentially, one-pedal driving—while an ‘Eco’ mode puts a limit
on engine output. In the e-Golf, you have two sets of variables: first,
three modes (Normal, Eco, and Eco+, with the latter two limiting power and
top speed), as well as three regen modes—accessed through a sideways toggle
of the shift lever—to help suit your driving style.

Responsiveness and handling
Both of these models offer perky, electric-car zip off the line, with
acceleration that’s a bit less zippy as you near highway speeds. That
high-speed sluggishness is more noticeable in the i-MiEV, which feels at its
best and most responsive below 50 mph or so.

In handling, these two models are extremely different as well. The e-Golf
feels precise and nimble in its handling, yet tracks along the roadways with
characteristic German heft; it feels absolutely secure and comfortable
cruising at 75 mph—although of course it doesn’t have the battery capacity
to do so for very long. On the other hand, the i-MiEV feels super-light and
communicative from the steering wheel. The suspension is quite
comfort-oriented in the i-MiEV, and while you get a lot of fore-and-aft
bobbing motion, it corners relatively flat—and it never ceased to surprise
us in how much fun it could be at low speed. At high speed, however, it’s
somewhat twitchy and easily thrown off by road crowning, truck ruts, and
tramlines.

Efficiency and range
The 16-kWh battery in the Mitsubishi i-MiEV starts off with a natural
disadvantage versus the 24-kWh one in the e-Golf. And the difference is
about as pronounced as you might expect, given that. The official EPA range
for the e-Golf is 83 miles, while it’s 62 miles for the i-MiEV. One key
difference in how this pans out in real-world driving is how that changes
with climate-control use. We’ve found our e-Golf to return consistently more
than its estimate with the climate control off (or mostly off), or right
around that estimate with more regular climate-control use. Meanwhile we
noticed in the i-MiEV that running the A/C led to a significant (perhaps 25
percent or more) drop in usable range.

Mechanical layout
These models are completely different in mechanical layout, too. The Golf is
front-wheel drive, with the motor system in front; it’s built on VW’s latest
(and already well-proven for safety) MQB platform, while the i-MiEV is
rear-wheel-drive, with the motor in back, and has its roots in Japanese kei
cars aimed at keeping footprints (and engine sizes, in the model on which
it’s based) small for registration and tax reasons. Both models do package
their battery packs toward the middle of the car, which helps equal out the
weight distribution somewhat—although in the i-MiEV, with its skinnier front
wheels and staggered tire sizes.

Interior space and usability
Here’s where these two models do have quite a bit in common. They’re both
four-door hatchbacks, with nice, low cargo floors and no clear concessions
in convenience to battery-pack placement. Rear seatbacks flip down easily in
both models, and the result is a very useful expanded space good for large
grocery runs or weekend projects. While that space itself is larger in the
e-Golf if you measure it by the floor area—mainly because the Mitsubishi is
so narrow—the i-MiEV’s height may be an advantage in some cases.

2016 Mitsubishi i-MiEV Quick Drive

Of course, it’s worth keeping one thing in mind: Both of these models
weren’t conceived from the ground up, like the Nissan Leaf, to be electric
cars. Considering that, both of these models do a great job convincing us
that electric cars can fit your lifestyle...in all shapes and sizes.
[© greencarreports.com]




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