By "harsh environments," I assume a Vermont resident would be referring to cold weather (although hot weather poses a greater threat to battery longevity). MINI (a division of BMW) says the CATL battery in our MINI Cooper SE suffers less cold-weather range-reduction than the Samsung battery used in its sister car, the BMW i3. Our summer GOM reading of 110 miles has decreased to as low as 75 miles when the thermometer fell below 0 Fahrenheit, but I haven't driven the car to fully discharge the battery to determine how conservative the GOM is being. The EPA rates the MINI Cooper SE's range at 110 miles, but one YouTuber drove 177 miles on a single charge in nice weather.I heard CATL batteries perform extremely poorly in harsh environments. I live in Vermont, so I would be worried about ending up with a CATL cell.
A separate stand-alone brand (along the lines of Genesis) takes quite a bit of resources to get going. Genesis has it's own separate showrooms and dealer network (often next to a Hyundai dealership, but different set of salespeople). In time, Hyundai may branch out IONIQ as its own brand, once the name becomes familiar to more people. It took seven years before Genesis was branched out as a separate brand from Hyundai, and it will certainly take awhile before the IONIQ name catches on with the majority of people. Most of us here on this board are familiar with the Ioniq name because we are EV enthusiasts, but the typical person will not have even seen an Ioniq on the street before (or would recognize one if they saw it).On a side note why is the Ioniq 5 have Hyundai badges? I thought it was going to a sub EV brand?
Really don't like the plastic cheap wraps around the wheel wells - on a rugged SUV like an Outback, but this car should be all one tone to show off the angles.
I saw somewhere that it will only have 6.2 inches ground clearance. That is not great for a CUV. That's what the Kona EV has, which is less than its ICE version. Was hoping maybe that this car could handle our cabin road, but doesn't look like it.
That'll be interesting to see. It would be madness, though, to charge too much. There's basically every reason to undercut Tesla (Being the currently dominating player in the market), if only by a couple thousand dollars.Looks good, my only concern is pricing...I bet it will be on the high side but we'll see.
I might even consider the lack of a rear wiper a deal breaker here in Canada. Road salt and grime on hatchbacks is virtually unavoidable. Aerodynamics always deposit grime on the stubby rear ends of hatches.I expect matte silver will be very popular for that very reason, Hyundai have never been subtle with their trims really, the Kona is a good example! Still, I think the Ioniq just about gets away with it due to the overall retro-future styling. Panel fit will be important, I've seen a few of the angled corners looking a bit off in some of these videos. One thing bugging me more - no rear wiper. :| Had that on a few big saloons and I've no idea why it's still, or has ever been a thing.
I might even consider the lack of a rear wiper a deal breaker here in Canada. Road salt and grime on hatchbacks is virtually unavoidable. Aerodynamics always deposit grime on the stubby rear ends of hatches.
This pic of the IONIQ 5 does not bode well in this regard to the lack of rear wiper for winter climes. [source]I might even consider the lack of a rear wiper a deal breaker here in Canada. Road salt and grime on hatchbacks is virtually unavoidable. Aerodynamics always deposit grime on the stubby rear ends of hatches.
By "harsh environments," I assume a Vermont resident would be referring to cold weather (although hot weather poses a greater threat to battery longevity). MINI (a division of BMW) says the CATL battery in our MINI Cooper SE suffers less cold-weather range-reduction than the Samsung battery used in its sister car, the BMW i3. Our summer GOM reading of 110 miles has decreased to as low as 75 miles when the thermometer fell below 0 Fahrenheit, but I haven't driven the car to fully discharge the battery to determine how conservative the GOM is being. The EPA rates the MINI Cooper SE's range at 110 miles, but one YouTuber drove 177 miles on a single charge in nice weather.
Does anyone know the ground clearance for the Ariya? Looking for a car that's good in the snow, tho not going to be off roading.I saw somewhere that it will only have 6.2 inches ground clearance. That is not great for a CUV. That's what the Kona EV has, which is less than its ICE version. Was hoping maybe that this car could handle our cabin road, but doesn't look like it.