The new
Polestar 2 has the Tesla Model 3 in its sights with a 292-mile range
Verdict
With
individual design, impressive build quality, interesting infotainment
technology and an all-electric driving experience that’s both engaging and
sophisticated, the Polestar 2 looks like a very credible alternative to the
Tesla Model 3. If this car is anything to go by, the future will be bright for
Polestar.
The Polestar 2 is the second product to come
from Volvo’s luxurious new ‘electric performance’ brand, but it is comfortably
the most relevant and important.
You see,
with only 1,500 examples of the Polestar 1 being sold worldwide, and a list price
just shy of £140,000, that car serves much more as a fanfare for the brand’s
arrival, rather than being a serious proposition for your average motorist.
There’s
something else, too: the 1 is a plug-in hybrid, whereas the 2 – and every
other Polestar to follow – is all-electric. So, not only
is the 2 much more representative of what we can expect from Polestar in the
future, it’s also the first big test of how credible and appealing the brand
will be to everyday car buyers. No pressure, then.
At this
size and price point, the Polestar 2 goes toe to toe with the Tesla Model 3, a car that has both credibility and appeal –
not to mention desirability and technology – in abundance. So, does Polestar 2
have what it takes to tempt buyers? Well, to find out, Auto Express has been
granted an exclusive drive in a prototype version.
It should
be noted that our drive took place in a controlled environment on a Swedish
test track, and although the car we sampled was largely production-ready, some
things did remain unfinished. Our car was also fitted with an optional
Performance Pack (costing £5,000) that includes bigger 20-inch forged alloys,
Brembo brakes and Öhlins manually adjustable dampers.
Those
adjustable dampers have 22 possible settings that alter their stiffness by up
to 50 per cent between extremes, and our test car’s were set somewhere around
the middle. In this guise, the suspension provided a really good balance of
comfort and control. The firm-but-fair ride stayed smooth on most surfaces, and
it was only when we found a particularly rough road that things became in any
way jarring.
More
impressive, though, was the car’s agility. Even fast changes of direction felt
really stable and assured, thanks to tight body control, mammoth grip and even
weight distribution. Quick, responsive steering also gave the car a darty
nature.
Perhaps the
most defining characteristic, though, was the Polestar 2’s acceleration. Two
electric motors give a combined 402bhp and four-wheel-drive traction, so it’s
pretty savage. Nail the accelerator from a standstill and you fly away from the
mark; on the move, even the merest tickle of the pedal is enough to get you
moving at a serious rate. Being an electric car, its acceleration comes with a
bare minimum of audible drama, and thanks to excellent noise suppression, the 2
is also an exceptional cruiser.
Importantly,
the Polestar 2 feels desirable in other ways. The 292-mile driving range is
competitive, the flamboyant design makes it stand out in a crowd, and the
high-grade materials mean it feels plush inside. The large central infotainment
screen looks good and uses an all-new Android operating system that gives you
some really clever Google-integrated functionality.
Is the
Polestar perfect? Nope. The boot is smaller than the Tesla’s,
rear headroom will be tight for anyone much over six feet tall, and the tiny
back window restricts vision. There’s barely any information on how long it’ll
take to charge up, and the brakes feel rather wooden and need a shove to get
working.
Still, that
doesn’t stop the 2 being a deeply impressive all-rounder. Tesla has had this
part of the market to itself for a little while, but in Polestar 2, there’s now
some very serious competition
Source:
Auto Express.
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