https://www.ocweekly.com/prepare-to-be-overwhelmed-by-the-2018-chevy-bolt-premier-part-2/
Prepare to be Overwhelmed by the 2018 Chevy Bolt Premier (Part 2)
May 1, 2018  Matt Coker

[images  / Matt Coker
https://www.ocweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/2018-Chevy-Bolt-Premier_main-1024x768.jpg

https://www.ocweekly.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/2018-Chevy-Bolt-Premier-charging-1024x768.jpg
The entertainment/navigation screen in the middle of the dashboard displays
battery charging info.
]

2018 Chevy Bolt EV Premier in “Kinetic Blue Metallic” is a charmer.

WRITER’S NOTE: This is part two of the Ride Me vehicle-review column
featuring the 2018 Chevy Bolt EV Premier. Click here to read part one, “To
Live and Die in the Arizona Desert in a 2018 Chevy Bolt EV Premier.”

Having just tested a performance brand’s electric car that costs $10,000
more, I was expecting to be underwhelmed by the 2018 Chevrolet Bolt EV
Premier.

Moments after slipping into the driver’s seat, I had the complete opposite
reaction. I was overwhelmed.

First of all, the Bolt felt roomier than the pricier ride, although I never
confirmed my suspicions with a measuring tape.

All the levers, buttons and adjusters were in driver-intuitive places, or at
least they were intuitive to this particular driver. Nothing rattles me more
when I first drive a new car than reaching over to push a button to find it
is not there but in a completely different place. Imagine if that happened
with the brakes!

Of course, the most important thing is the drive, and the Bolt certainly did
not disappoint when compared to that EV that cost 10 grand more.

[image] A trickle charger that comes with the Bolt plugs in on the other end
to a standard household outlet.

The electric drive unit pushed out adequate power when I needed it to get up
hills or onto freeways, while braking, coasting downhill or joining
stop-and-go traffic actually added more juice to the battery. The parking
brake and power steering are also electric, and precision shifting is
electronic.

I was so blown away that early in my test ride I pulled over, got out and
took another hard look at the thing.

That’s when it struck me: This Bolt is a looker, although, truth be told, I
also realized I am a sucker for a “Kinetic Blue Metallic” paint job (which
is a $350 upgrade on this particular car).

But it was more than that. Near as I can figure it was something to do with
the Kinetic Blue Metallic being offset by the glass and chrome headlamps
wrapped in orange reflectors, the 17-inch, ultra-bright, machined-painted
aluminum wheels and the gold-wrapped-in chrome Chevy emblem against a curved
black panel below the hood. All I know is, it’s a looker.

Way back in the Wild West days of the EVs, the cars would be stripped down
to near nothing inside to keep them lighter. Besides, demand was not high
for them, so what would be the point?

When demand became keen a few gas crises ago, automakers overloaded EVs and
hybrids with extras because people wanted them so much they’d dole out more.  

One thing I appreciated about my test Bolt is many items that would have
been options in the not-too-distant past are standard. This includes the
Chevrolet MyLink audio system with a 10.2-inch diagonal touchscreen and
Bluetooth, Apple Carplay and Android Auto connectivity.

From that screen you can also access subscription services to OnStar and a
4G LTE wi-fi hotspot and SiriusXM satellite radio, which is complimentary
for the first three months you own or lease the vehicle.

The standard audio system has six speakers, but my particular test model
included a $485 infotainment Package that includes seven premium Bose
speakers as well as wireless device charging and a USB charging port in the
rear. There are standard USB ports up front, of course.

Other standard features include keyless entry and starting, remote starting,
six-way adjustable front bucket seats, heated and leather-appointed seats
throughout, leather-wrapped steering wheel, automatic air conditioning,
power winds with express down (and driver express up) and, also for the
driver, a separate, multi-color, 8-inch screen that displays driving
information. 

[image] Front view of the 2018 Chevy Bolt EV Premier.

There is a false cargo floor in the back for extra storage; it’s also the
natural place to keep the 120-volt charging cord. A mid-afternoon extending
into nighttime trip from Costa Mesa to downtown Los Angeles used up a lot of
battery juice, but after plugging into a standard household outlet in my
garage around 10 p.m., the Bolt was back up to full charge by the time I
left for work at 9 the next morning.

Standard exterior features include the aforementioned wheels, all-season and
puncture-sealing blackwall tires, heated and power-adjustable outside
mirrors (with turn signal indicators), LED daytime running lights and a roof
rack with side rails. The HID projection headlamps have automatic on/off
controls.

Safety features, which also come standard, include an array of air bags,
including one for the driver’s knees and seat-mounted for all, tire-pressure
monitor, theft-deterrent system, Stabilitrak stability control system with
traction control, four-wheel disc, anti-lock brakes, rear and
surround-vision cameras, dimming rearview mirror, rear-park assist, rear
child seat lock anchors and lane-change, side blind-zone and rear
cross-traffic alerts. 

Besides the paint and infotainment options, my test ride included $750 DC
fast charging provisions and a $495 Driver Confidence II package that
includes Intellibeam automatic high-beam headlamps, a following distance
indicator, forward collision alert, lane keep assist with lane departure
warning, low-speed forward automatic braking and front pedestrian
detection/braking.

Without the options, this Bolt came in at $40,905. The $2,125 of options,
along with the $875 destination charge, pushed the price up to $43,905.

Chevy dealer phone home …

However, state and federal rebates for EV ownership can total as much as
$10,000. 

Then there is the fuel economy. Electric vehicles do not run on gas, but the
government comes up with a miles per gallon equivalency for comparison
purposes. This Bolt comes in at 128 mpg in the city, 110 mpg on the highway
and a combined 119 mpg, according to fueleconomy.gov.

It uses 28 kilowatt hours per 100 miles and has 238 miles of range on a full
charge, which at 240 volts can be achieved in 9.3 hours, adds
fueleconomy.gov, which calculates you save $4,000 in fuel costs over five
years when compared to the average new vehicles. What you are really saving
is the environment, as the Bolt scored 10s on 1-10 scales (10 being best)
for smog and fuel economy and greenhouse gas rankings.

The Bolt is covered by Chevrolet Complete Care that includes two maintenance
visits with rotations of all four tires and 27-point inspections. Warranties
are bumper-to-bumper (three years or 36,000 miles), limited powertrain (five
years or 60,000 miles) and electric propulsion component (eight years or
100,000 miles), with roadside assistance and courtesy transportation at the
service center.

If your driving pattern is like mine (office is less than 10 miles away and
weekend are mostly spent bouncing around town), snagging a Bolt is a no
brainer. If you can manage to charge it from a home battery fed with juice
from solar panels on your roof, it’ll almost be like someone’s paying you to
drive it.
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...
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-review-Live-Die-in-a-Bolt-EV-in-AZ-Buy-a-Tesla-tp4689970.html
EVLN: (review) Live& Die in a Bolt EV in AZ> (Buy a Tesla)
Apr 29 2018


+
http://driving.ca/electra-meccanica/auto-news/news/official-car-of-vancouver
Vancouver's eRoadster mixes old-school style and new EV tech
May 04, 2018  For the past few years the company had joined forces with
electric vehicle startup Electra Meccanica in the development and production
of the single-seat Solo EV, and earlier this year moved under the ownership
umbrella of a new company called simply Meccanica. With all those
lithium-ion battery packs and electric ...
https://postmediadriving.files.wordpress.com/2018/05/dscn0167.jpg?quality=99&strip=all&w=960&h=480&crop=1




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