Recent Updates

 

10/14/2024 12:00 PM

2026 Citroen C5 Aircross EV previewed by rakish concept

 

10/14/2024 12:00 PM

Renault 4 reborn as bold electric crossover for under £30,000

 

10/14/2024 12:00 PM

MG releases first pictures of ZS EV replacement

 

10/14/2024 12:00 PM

New Alpine A110 R Ultime is a £276k swansong with 345bhp

 

10/14/2024 12:00 PM

Citroen will not limit petrol cars to hit electric sales mix targets

 

10/14/2024 12:00 PM

Leapmotor B10 is UK-bound crossover to rival Renault 4

 

10/14/2024 12:00 PM

Live report: The best new cars at the 2024 Paris motor show

 

10/14/2024 12:00 AM

Audi Q6 gains Sportback version with 408 miles of range

 

10/13/2024 12:00 PM

Rifles to roadsters: The fascinating story of I-Pace maker Magna

 

10/12/2024 12:00 PM

Revisiting Britain's best car museums - and the Vauxhall Corsa

<<    128   129   130   131   132   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 6745   Next >
Is Polestar about to out-Lotus Lotus?
Thursday, Jul 18, 2024 12:00 PM
polestar 5 prototype 2023 front left quarter static
Polestar will soon release its own Taycan competitor in the form of the snouty 5
Unlike the new Emeya, the upcoming Polestar 5 has the engineering hallmarks of an old-school Lotus

A fews week ago I was in Austria to have a go in the Lotus Emeya – an electric super-saloon with as much as 904bhp and a good dollop more interior space than you get in the Porsche Taycan, especially in the back.

If you can make peace with the fact that it’s a Lotus that treads as heavily as a V8 turbodiesel-equipped L322-generation Range Rover (not easy, I'll admit), the Emeya is actually quite a decent thing. It's no reincarnated Carlton but it has some likeability about it.

And yet, out in the Tyrolean wilds, with the Emeya S (that’s the less powerful one, with a pitiful 603bhp) making a fair case for itself with fine steering and fluid handling, as a product it still had the whiff of a pulled punch about it. I couldn’t put my finger on why, but I have done since. It’s partly down to…Volvo.

Well not Volvo strictly but Polestar, which began life as the Swedish marque's performance EV subsidiary (but is now a standalone firm within the Geely empire).

Polestar will soon release its own Taycan competitor in the form of the snouty 5. As a purely electric car, it'll be horribly heavy, just like the 2.5-tonne Emeya. However, unlike the Emeya, it’s being developed in the UK, by a crack team of engineers who have devised for it a bonded-aluminium chassis with ‘supercar’ stiffness.

This team, based at the MIRA proving ground near Nuneaton, has also been given free reign to develop the axle and steering systems from the ground up. The car will be low-slung and deliberately devoid of complex, electronics-reliant hardware, such as active anti-roll bars, rear-steering and air springs, all of which the Emeya gorges on.

The 5 will be an unusual Polestar in that it sets out to be a seat-of-your-pants drivers’ car. The conception sounds quite Lotusy, too, doesn’t it?

In a way, the 5 will be a four-door Evora EV. And this is where things get perplexing. Volvo and Polestar are ultimately controlled by Chinese conglomerate Geely. The same company also owns Lotus. All three brands exist under the same umbrella, so any resource developed by one entity to one can be made available to another.

What I’m therefore wondering is why the unapologetically design-led Polestar brand is taking a bespoke, purist engineering approach for its Taycan fighter while the Emeya, coming from a company whose name has hitherto been synonymous with machines of unfettered synaptic delight, has ended up sharing its platform, albeit modified, with the Zeekr 009 and the Smart #1.

The Emeya is good – better than many will judge it to be, having never even driven it. But it could have been considerably more Lotusy if the team behind it (based near Frankfurt, as it happens, not Hethel) had been allowed to take the 5 approach. Or at least use the 5 platform.

Instead, what’s happened seems akin to Audi being allowed to develop a clean-sheet honey of a chassis for the TT while Porsche has to adapt a VW Golf platform for the Boxster. Make it make sense. 

< Prev    of 6745   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields