Rather embarrassingly, I haven’t managed to write up my roundup from GreenFleet Scotland 2017 at the Royal Highland Centre. The last couple of months have been hectic, with the house move taking up a lot of my time (and energy), meaning things like this have taken a back seat. No excuse, I know, and I’ll try to be more diligent in future.
Anyone looking for more of my witterings, both motoring and otherwise, follow me on Twitter, or check out these articles I’ve produced for the site Supercars.net.
I’m a big fan of what GreenFleet are doing. Their annual events break down the anxieties of electric and hybrid powertrain sceptics by allowing fleet managers and the general public to get up close and hands on with these vehicles, helping to encourage uptake in a fleet sector that put 1.38 million vehicles on UK roads in 2016.
Showing posts with label P90D. Show all posts
Showing posts with label P90D. Show all posts
Sunday, 9 July 2017
Silent, and Now Subtle Too - Greenfleet Scotland 2017 Roundup
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Wednesday, 20 April 2016
The Green R-EVOLUTION Is Upon Us - EVOLUTION Scotland 2016 Round Up
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Visitors to the RHC were greeted by hindsight in the form of the original Honda Insight. |
Fiat group impressed once again with their offering, bringing a wide range of cars, each of which with it’s own green tech. Their Fiat 500 and Panda both sported different flavours of TwinAir engine, a small capacity petrol unit turbocharged to increase both power and efficiency in different driving scenarios. Supremely characterful, this is an engine that loves to be revved.
Also on show and available to drive, was the Alfa Romeo Giulietta with the company’s JTDM engine, putting out 120hp and returning impressive economy figures of up to 74mpg. Figures like these may not entirely stir the soul the way Alfa Romeos should, but if ever there’s a place where red leather should be fitted in a steely grey car, as in the case of this one, then it’s in a Giulietta. ‘Nuff said.
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The mighty Panda Cross was more character than car. |
Renault arguably had the most varied selection of cars on show, drawing crowds with the nifty Twizy electric car. Closer to a motorbike than a car in a lot of ways (with a notable exception being the two extra wheels), the Twizy aims to solve the issue of inner-city streets clogged with swollen diesels all vying for the same limited parking spaces by being as minimalist as possible. Keep an eye out for our review of this head-turner.
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'Look at me, look at me!' -Twizy, 2016 |
At the other end of the scale, the company’s recently launched Kadjar crossover was on show, which draws on the company’s relationship with Nissan, yet manages to retain a character all of it’s own, adding some French flair to the tough-yet-sleek lines of it’s Japanese counterpart, the Qashqai.
Not to be outdone on the greener side of things, Renault also brought along Zoe, sister car to the popular Nissan Leaf EV. With a serene cabin and near-silent running, it demonstrates the levels of refinement on offer to the EV motorist whilst providing the practicality of a mid-sized hatchback car.
Toyota had a raft of hybrids on show, alongside their Mirai concept, which shows off their idea of what a mass-produced, hydrogen powered car would be like. Clearly building upon the familiar lines of the Prius, the Miraii shows that hydrogen motoring isn’t as far away as we think.
The absence of diesels from the Toyota lineup is notable, with the Japanese manufacturer and their premium brand, Lexus choosing to focus on petrol/hybrid drivetrains as they aim to drop the average emissions across all their cars to under 70g/km.
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The Miraii hints that a Hydrogen future may not be as far away as we think |
Jaguar brought along their XE and XF (the preview of the former can be found here) for eager drivers to get behind the wheel of, both sporting the company’s new Ingenium 2.0 diesel engine, presented here in its 160bhp, 280 lb-ft form. Impressively, CO2 emissions for this power point in the XE come in below the 100g/km-mark, and a still-quite-remarkable 104g/km in the larger XF.
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The JLR stand, in 'stealth mode' |
The baby Range Rover was joined by its cousin, the Land Rover Discovery Sport, which proved itself to be a commanding vehicle, and very smooth on tarmac. Plenty of glass lends a light air to the cabin, something the more upmarket Evoque has to do without.
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A Kouple of the Kias at Ingliston on Saturday |
Keen to impress were Kia, who brought along a cross-section of their range, spanning the terrified-looking Sportage, the nifty Pro-Cee'd, the Optima -which has the Mondeo firmly in it’s sights - and their own interpretation of what an EV should be, the Soul EV. I was very impressed with the electric Soul, it’s useful, quoted 130-mile-plus range lending it perfect to commuting, while the wide apertures and vast tailgate tick many practicality boxes.
We can’t talk
about EVOLUTION without mentioning the stunning BMW i8, which once again proved itself the darling of the show,
with queues for drives just about out the door and tensions running high
between excited plug-in fans waiting their turn. This purified expression of what a plug-in-hybrid sportscar can be has its sharp and focussed nose pointed straight at the future. McMotors took a closer look at the i8 and it's sister, the i3, after they delighted the crowds at last year's EVOLUTION. Check that out here.
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The ever popular i8 in a brief moment of rest at the show |
BMW also took
the opportunity to show off its hybrid tech in the X5, bringing PHEV ability to it’s op of the range SUV. This may
seem like a strange choice of vehicle for pioneering green technology, but when
you take into account that it has a CO2 figure of just 77g/km, you realise this
may not be such an odd thing after all.
The car which seemed to do the most laps of the track, though, was the remarkable Tesla Model S, which I experienced not long before the EVOLUTION show. You can read about my experience of Elon Musk's super-EV, not to mention what it did to my spine, here.
All of this, and a lot more besides (too much to fit into one post!) was available for the all to see and try up-close, at the EVOLUTION Motor Show at Ingliston this year, and, if things carry on this way, there’ll be a lot more again next year. Record interest in the cars on show, plus the amount of effort and enthusiasm put in by car manufacturers across the globe prove that the wheels of the green revolution are very much in motion.
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Ludicrous mode proved ludicrously popular |
The car which seemed to do the most laps of the track, though, was the remarkable Tesla Model S, which I experienced not long before the EVOLUTION show. You can read about my experience of Elon Musk's super-EV, not to mention what it did to my spine, here.
All of this, and a lot more besides (too much to fit into one post!) was available for the all to see and try up-close, at the EVOLUTION Motor Show at Ingliston this year, and, if things carry on this way, there’ll be a lot more again next year. Record interest in the cars on show, plus the amount of effort and enthusiasm put in by car manufacturers across the globe prove that the wheels of the green revolution are very much in motion.
We’ll have more in-depth features and reviews of some of the cars from the show in the coming weeks.
Let us know what your highlights of EVOLUTION 2016 were @Jack_McMotors on Twitter.
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Wednesday, 13 April 2016
Spring Clean Motoring Part 3: The Future's Bright With Tesla Lighting The Way
It’s not long to go until the EVOLUTION Motor Show charges once more to Ingliston, whisking countless delighted patrons
around the Royal Highland Centre’s on-site test track in all manner of
eco-themed vehicles. One of this year’s most exciting cars on display comes
from a company that, up until 8 years ago, didn’t even build cars.
Tesla have just taken over 325,000 pre-orders
for their newest offering, even though right now it’s little more than a concept.
The Model 3 aims to bring technology from Tesla’s current lineup of
uber-futuristic swish-mobiles, which includes the Model S and the
soon-to-hit-UK-roads Model X SUV, and deliver on a platform closer in size to a
BMW 3-series.
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The Model 3 brings high-end leccy-tech to a wider market |
That’s dangerous territory. The 3-series
has been the undisputed king of its segment for 41 years, pretty much carving
the template for all mid-size sports saloons since. Buoyed along by the public’s near-absolute trust of German build quality and virtually unwavering brand loyalty, how
will the Tesla fare when put up against the distilled and refined Ultimate
Driving Machine?
To get a feel for where the company was at
just before it’s biggest launch to date, I dropped in to Tesla’s new showroom
on Multrees Walk in Edinburgh. Appearing right at home nestled amongst the fashion boutiques
and single-brand jewellery stores either side of it, Tesla have shirked the
traditional car dealership model of out-of-town industrial estates, instead
opting for eyes-on visibility, building a brand in a similar way to Apple,
where product exposure is everything.
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New approach: Tesla's dealership looks like it might sell shoes |
Taking pride of place in the showroom is a bare-bones
chassis from the Model S, showing off the innovative, twin-motor drivetrain and
battery packs, all very low to the floor. With Elon Musk having declared
Tesla’s technology free to the world to use and learn from, secrecy is not an
issue here. Also on display are the car’s mighty adaptive air suspension arms,,
which help maintain a level ride and pitch the car into corners, or lift the
nose – not quite west coast rapper style – to clear bumps.
Seated behind the wheel (of a fully dressed
car) the Model S feels like it was designed from the ground-up as a product
seated firmly for the 21st century – and I suppose it was. From little
details like the door handles doubling as a pocket for your mobile phone, to the
giant, iPad-dwarfing central control screen, incorporating clever sat-nav to help you navigate the car's useful 250 mile range between charges on longer journeys, the interface for which mimics the ease of use of modern smartphones. This car has the future in its sights – and that's all besides the sheer connectivity of
the thing.
Another feature shared by the Model S and
today’s raft of super-sleek smartphones is the ability to receive updates and
fixes over the air. Using it’s own internet connection, the car feeds data back
to Tesla HQ in California, where information from cars all round the world is
compiled to see how the various systems, including the car’s auto-pilot
mega-brain – more on that later - are coping in real world conditions. From here, system updates can be released, which the car will download and install
entirely by itself.
On the road, the mighty tesla feels
ethereal. I’ve felt smoothness in big,
executive Jags, Mercs, Audis and BMWs before, but nothing comes close to the
way the Tesla glides from place to place. The self-levelling suspension adds
an air of floating, untroubled by ancient constructs like the ground. In fact,
the only thing that demonstrated the limits of the air suspension’s
capabilities on my passenger run in a full-fat P90D was the car’s incredible surge of power, as
the combined 762bhp output from the twin-motor set up silently bullys
the horizon closer.
It’s not so much the power itself that
surprises, rather the delivery – the way it erupts all of a sudden, without
noise or any of that calamity. It simply goes.
One minute you’re quietly cruising along, the next you’re bending physics. 0-62mph in 2.7 seconds surprises in a car that makes next to no noise at all. You could buy a P90D and offer a sideline as a chiropractor, using the G-forces this car develops off the mark to realign your passengers spine.
Power is split between the front and rear
electric motors – the front 259bhp for efficiency through the front wheels, with the
503bhp rear motor focused more towards high performance. This gives a rear power
bias, the two motors working together to give the Model S astounding levels of grip
whilst still handling in a sporty manner.
By no stretch of the imagination is the Model S a stripped-out sports car. Its weight is masked well by the suspension trickery,
but it still tips the scales at 2,200kg. Most of this weight is down to the
battery pack, an issue faced by all electric cars. Tesla do well to pack the
batteries into the floor, keeping the centre of gravity as low as possible, but
all that weight is still there, and centrifugal force is a harsh mistress.
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Another two tricks up the Tesla's sleeve are it's hidden extra row of seats in the boot - passengers' noses will take a bashing |
That being said, you’d be hard pressed to find a
more comprehensive car package than a well-specced Model S P90D. All at once it
manages to be, a supercar, a sports saloon, a comfortable limousine, a tablet
computer, a fashion item, a 7-seat people mover, a twin-booted grand tourer, a
personal chauffeur - all whilst still saving the world, one charge at a time.
With the lack of any kind of noise, it would be easy to rest ones foot on the
throttle and not register the car gently accelerating until you arrive at a
traffic light doing 155mph, but that’s where features like Tesla’s auto-pilot
system come in. This combines radar-guided cruise control with lane recognition
technology, aided by a whole host of sensors and processors, to effectively
allow the car to drive itself. The driver becomes accessory as the computers
take over to gently guide you to your destination.
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The Model S's giant centre screen serves all manner of purposes |
Initial doubts about trusting the system
fall by the wayside when you actually try it, as if the sensors latch on to a
manual car, the system is so precise that you can feel every little gear change
from the leading driver. Of course, the option is always there to take the helm
and breeze along some B-roads, but for everyday trips and the tedium of
creeping through traffic, the Tesla can pick up the slack.
The Model S is the only model Tesla
currently sell in the UK, with the Model X joining it later this year. Tesla are bringing it along to the Royal
Highland Centre this weekend, where car fans will be able to get up close with this
high-end embodiment of what an electric car can be. It’s fascinating to think
that, if Tesla sticks to it’s current trajectory, within the decade we could be
seeing similar levels of connectivity and electric drivetrain technology in B- and
C-segment cars.
The Model 3 is nothing if not a clear statement
of intent from Tesla to make this technology more and more available in mass-produced
cars. Whilst BMW won't quite be shaking in it's boots yet, Tesla have definitely given them something to think seriously about over the next few years.
It's popularity proves, as Elon Musk elucidates here, that Tesla's business model is working and it's only a matter of time before we're all quietly swooshing around, being excellently productive as our dashboard butlers find and navigate the best route through rush hour traffic, all whilst producing no emissions whatsoever. Come and discover the future of electric car tech at the Evolution motor show, on Saturday 16th April at the Royal Highland Centre, Ingliston.
It's popularity proves, as Elon Musk elucidates here, that Tesla's business model is working and it's only a matter of time before we're all quietly swooshing around, being excellently productive as our dashboard butlers find and navigate the best route through rush hour traffic, all whilst producing no emissions whatsoever. Come and discover the future of electric car tech at the Evolution motor show, on Saturday 16th April at the Royal Highland Centre, Ingliston.
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The Model S - showing there can be a bright, green future in electric motoring that doesn't have to mean comprimise |
Labels:
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