OomStu_ZA wrote: Fri Mar 17, 2023 5:38 am
S_94 wrote: Thu Mar 16, 2023 11:47 pm
Actually looks okay. Would be interesting to see if they do a GTi or 'sporty' version.
Still prefer the UrbanRebel and looking forward to seeing more from that.
According to VW there will be a GTI version of this model.
https://www.topgear.com/car-news/hot-ha ... ion-id2all
No doubt VW will include monthly subscription based services with this model when it launches, hence the "affordable" purchase cost. So if you wanted heated seats, et al, you will end up paying a lot more monthly than the sticker price.
@S_94; From what I’ve read, the ID.2all is VW’s equivalent model of Cupra’s UrbanRebel, so the GTI version would very likely get the same battery / electric motor as the sport(iest) version of the UrbanRebel. VW have always tended to be quite conservative with their designs - much more so than Seat / Cupra, so that may have influenced the design of the ID.2all. If the ID.2all is the direction that VW is going with their design language for EV’s, then IMHO it’s a significant step in the right direction. I’ve always considered the current ID.3 to be a rather ugly, ungainly, slightly gawky looking car and there’s something about its proportions that don’t really work for me. How can the Cupra Born look so much better (to my eyes anyway) when it’s essentially the same car as the ID.3?
@OomStu_ZA; subscription based services seems to be the way that car manufacturers are going, with the ability to activate options and features after a vehicle’s been built / left the factory. So yes I agree, and I think future generations of cars will be built with the necessary hardware/software to support activation of specific options that are paid for via a monthly subscription.
The UK government and private companies now need to get their act together pretty quickly and start putting a EV charging structure in place that’s fit for purpose - a sufficiently large enough number of public charging stations nationwide with rapid and super rapid charge points to eliminate / minimise long queues for vehicle charging, more charging points in towns and cities, solving the home charging problem for people without off road charging facilities, on top of which the cost of public charging needs to be affordable. Without that, then IMHO the general public is never going to fully accept EV’s as a viable alternative to ICE cars.