Here’s a car that puts it all together. It’s a total effort,
a studied application of brain-power and enthusiasm that embraces the electric
mandate with gusto and without a whiff of the-government-made-us reluctance.
And this from none other than GM, the company that sued California over the EV
mandate; that forever bears the mark of Cain for killing off its own pioneering
electric, the EV1.
Everything about
the Spark is all-in
Everything about the Spark is all-in. its cropped
dimensions, along with its styling, fit the image of an EV but still manage to
produce respectable and well-organized interior space. The interior is
bristling with high-res display screens packed with energy info. And its husky
electric motor is a deceptively simple yet potent design that technical editor
K.C. Colwell dubbed “the 110-cube Harley V-twin of the EV world.” Colwell
wishes readers to know about its hollow coaxial design, which routes one
half-shaft directly through the motor; its low, 5500rpm redline; and its
ripping, no-typo 400 pound-feet of torque.
The interior is
bristling with high-res display screens packed with energy info
All of these attributes blend into a happy balance for
zero-emissions driving. The 21.0-kWh battery is on the large side, while the
car’s 2940-pound curb weight is on the light end, so frugal consumption
produced our observed 66-mile range even as the monster motor, set in sport
mode, delivered a 7.9-second goose to 60mph. That makes the Spark the quickest
by more than half a second and, even more exceptionally in this group, a kick
to drive. It zaps through traffic with notably eager steering and roll control
and a hearty response from both the go and stop pedals.
The 21.0-kWh
battery is on the large side, while the car’s 2940-pound curb weight is on the
light end
The Spark is cheap-chic inside, with lightning strikes of
body-color accents (five paint colors are offered if electric blue isn’t your
flavor) and a motorcycle-like stand-up cluster on the column that packs a
high-res and vividly colored display. Another in the dash conveys even more
data about your energy supply and consumption. A lot of the pages look borrowed
from the Volt, especially the transparent beaker of green goo that Chevy uses
to graphically represent battery-charge state.
The Spark is
cheap-chic inside, with lightning strikes of body-color accents and a
motorcycle-like stand-up cluster on the column that packs a high-res and
vividly colored display
In-dash navigation is only available as a pricey smartphone
app that syncs to the console screen. To find the closest charging points,
you’ll have to rely on your smartphone. Also, we wish the onboard charger’s
capacity, at 3.3 kW, were as mighty as the 6.6ers in four of the test’s cars
(only the Smart has the same 3.3-kW capacity). To get the test done, which took
two complete recharges, the Spark spent more than 12 hours sucking the cord of
our Level 2 charger, versus 6.5 for the Focus. Only the Fiat spent more time
plugged in, at almost 14 hours.
Yet, for EV drivers who will use it for city commutes and
recharge at night, the Spark has ample range. It is the one gold the sparkles.
Specs
·
Price: $27,820
·
Motor: AC permanent-magnet, synchronous
·
Power: 141hp @ 2000rpm
·
Torque: 400lb-ft @ 0
·
Transmission: 1-speed direct drive
·
0-60mph: 7.9sec
·
Top speed: 90mph
·
Weight: 2940 pounds
·
EPA: 128/109 MPGe
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