https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/hyundai-kona-ev-prototype-2018-first-drive-electric-suv
Hyundai Kona EV prototype 2018: first drive of electric SUV
11 May 2018  Matt Saunders

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Hyundai Kona Electric 64kWh prototype

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]

Early taste of zero-emissions crossover hatchback suggests it has battery
range to back up its price

The Hyundai Kona Electric is perhaps most simply described as the other
battery-powered compact crossover SUV due to be arriving in UK showrooms in
2018.

Given the coverage generated already by the Jaguar I-Pace even before the
car has been properly launched to the press, Hyundai might do well to grab
more than a moment of limelight for the Kona Electric — a car that, while
far from ordinary-looking, hasn’t got the razzmatazz of Jaguar’s design, the
sheen of its premium brand, or quite that car’s performance appeal.

But, as a drive in a prototype on German roads has just revealed, the Kona
Electric may well have more of what really matters to EV drivers than what
Hyundai and Kia has delivered with their electric efforts thus far, or that
its direct rivals offer: battery range.

The exact positioning of Hyundai’s second all-electric passenger car to
market, after the Ioniq, is still to be confirmed ahead of a UK showrooms
arrival later this summer. What’s already clear, however, is that the Kona
Electric won’t be priced like too many other compact crossover hatchbacks;
company sources suggest they’re working hard to make the top-of-the-line
version between £35,000 and £37,000 (before any purchase incentive).

So this’ll certainly be an expensive crossover hatchback in flagship trim,
at least, and a fairly pricey compact EV to boot. But it’ll also be a
relatively powerful one, with a 201bhp electric motor driving the front
wheels and a lithium ion battery that, at 64kWh of storage, is a closer
match for the battery capacity of a Tesla Model S than that in a Volkswagen
e-Golf or Nissan Leaf.

For those who’d prefer it, Hyundai will also offer the car with 134bhp of
motive power and 39kWh of power storage, very likely for a starting price
well below £30,000 once the Government’s plug-in car grant has been
accounted for.

What is the Hyundai Kona Electric prototype like?

Based on a model platform that was designed for electric propulsion from the
start, the Kona Electric has a drive motor similar in concept to the one
that powers the Ioniq Electric, but a battery that’s different from that of
its sibling in one key respect: it’s liquid-cooled. It’s heavy, too — making
the Kona Electric’s kerb weight swell to more than 1.6 tonnes in the case of
our test car.

But then big batteries tend to be heavy ones and the Kona Electric’s has
been rated as being worth exactly 300 miles of cruising range for the car on
the Worldwide Harmonised Light Vehicle Test Procedure lab test cycle. That
bests the ‘autonomy’ of the latest Leaf and Renault Zoe by around 70% and is
also comparable with the brim-to-brim touring range that you might expect of
a petrol-powered Kona of similar power and performance. Charging is possible
via AC at-home wallbox or by CCS DC 100kW fast charge, the latter needing 54
minutes to give an 80% charge to the battery.

While the Kona Electric is front-wheel drive, unlike other front-driven
Konas it uses the more sophisticated independent rear suspension system
you’ll find on the more powerful four-wheel-drive versions instead of the
torsion beam rear configuration adopted at the cheaper end of the car’s
showroom range.

The car has the high standard equipment specification you’d expect of a car
at the price (an 8.0in touchscreen infotainment system, digital instruments,
a head-up display and a premium audio system), while a redesigned grille and
bumpers, as well as bespoke 17in alloy wheels, distinguish the car from its
rangemates. Back on the inside, the Kona Electric offers marginally reduced
boot space relative to other models, down 29 litres to 332 litres overall.

The interior of our prototype test car wasn’t representative, we were
assured, of the final production version for material specification or fit
and finish. Our car certainly suggested Hyundai will have its work cut out
to make this feel like a car worth a £30k price tag, with trim quality on
the door consoles in particular looking and feeling a bit cheap — albeit
perhaps misleadingly so. The Kona Electric’s also only averagely practical
by compact crossover standards; there’s enough rear-seat accommodation for
growing teenagers but the back seats are a bit of a squeeze for full-sized
adults.

What is the Hyundai Kona Electric prototype like to drive?

On the move, our test car rode with decent suppleness at town speeds and
with reasonable isolation on the motorway, in spite of its
efficiency-boosting tyres. But while the car corners flatly, its grip levels
are quite modest — even on bone-dry Tarmac — and are such that, even though
its traction and stability control systems make the car easy to keep control
of, you couldn’t call it fun to drive. Weighty steering and vertical body
control that can run away a little unchecked over bigger lumps and bumps
combine to make the Kona Electric feel like a bigger, heavier car than its
dimensions might suggest.

You can certainly feel the effects, at times, of that 291lb ft of torque (a
figure that’ll be common to both versions of the car) being transmitted to
the road exclusively through the front wheels. There’s a pervasive numbness
to the car’s steering, but it can’t quite mask the effect of all that
tractive force interfering with your chosen steering line when you
accelerate hard from lowish speeds. We should add, however, that while our
test car wasn’t quite production-spec in terms of interior finish, neither
was it quite representative of the finished version in terms of suspension
tuning.

The Kona Electric’s performance level feels strong – although, due to its
weight, perhaps not as strong as its headline power and torque lead you to
expect. Hyundai quotes a 0-62mph showing of 7.6sec — which beats any
comparable rival save for BMW’s i3.

But like all directly driven EVs, the Kona Electric feels much stronger when
speeding up from town speeds than it does on the motorway, where it remains
only adequately responsive and quiet. There is, of course, excellent
throttle response and linearity to enjoy about the way the car responds to
your right foot, but there's also a slight sense of fussy oversensitivity to
the accelerator feel that can make the pedal tricky to modulate when using
Sport driving mode; we much preferred driving the car in Comfort mode.

And for those primarily interested in whether the car’s battery range is
really as good as Hyundai claims, there’s encouraging news. Our test route
included town, motorway and mountain roads, and intensive driving as well as
touring. While the car’s indicated average energy efficiency, tested over
extended distances, was as high as 7.0kWh per 100km and as low as 16kWh at
times, our overall experience suggested that you could easily average the
12kWh per 100km necessary to make good on Hyundai’s 300-mile real-world
range on a mix of urban and extra-urban roads. At times, you could even
improve on it.

While price may therefore make the top-of-the-range 64kWh version a tough
sell to some, to others it’ll earn consideration for its battery range
alone. On this evidence, it’ll be a car with strong performance and
refinement, as well as respectable if undistinguished handling.

But it’ll be the 39kWh version of the Kona Electric that could represent the
greater threat to the market’s bigger-selling battery cars, whose near
200-mile range should also be believed on this evidence. Its positioning
could represent a tempting proposition to customers clearly predisposed
towards a crossover bodystyle, who are ready to make the jump to an electric
car with just enough usability to meet their needs.

Where Frankfurt, Germany Price circa £36,000 (TBC); On sale Summer 2018;
Engine AC electric motor, front-wheel drive; Power 201bhp; Torque 291lb ft
from 0rpm; Gearbox direct drive; Kerb weight 1610kg; Top speed 104mph;
0-62mph 7.6sec; Fuel economy tbc; Electric range 300 miles (WLTP); CO2 na;
[© autocar.co.uk]


http://www.autoexpress.co.uk/hyundai/kona/103469/new-hyundai-kona-electric-review
New Hyundai Kona Electric review
11 May, 2018  The electric powertrain is smooth and quiet, and despite the
car's weight (this .... hold fire on a judgement of the interior quality
until trying a final production car ...
http://cdn1.autoexpress.co.uk/sites/autoexpressuk/files/2018/05/act_0394_1550_hr.jpg


https://www.whatcar.com/news/2018-hyundai-kona-electric-review/
2018 Hyundai Kona Electric review – price, specs and release date
11 May 2018  The SUV looks like becoming a key weapon to be wielded by
manufacturers to get the car-buying public to accept electric powertrains.
Over the next couple of ...
http://whatcar.media/jpg/50/0/0/960/640/0/0/0/0/aspectfit/0/0/0/0/0/0/images/uploads/inline/07627fe0fba2cc60344b1e3cc12977039f29c3f6.jpg


+
http://www.carbodydesign.com/2018/05/kia-reveals-all-electric-niro-ev/
Kia reveals all-electric Niro EV
16 May 2018  At the 5th International Electric Vehicle Expo in Jeju, Korea
Kia has presented the all-electric version of the Niro crossover, first
launched in 2016 …
http://www.carbodydesign.com/media/2018/05/Kia-Niro-EV-01-720x495.jpg




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