Here's the 19" wheel shown in the video @Kendalf linked in post #77:Yeah, I think I'd also be a little disappointed if shown that "sketch" above - especially since all the pro-mo shots for the Project 45 show the 20" (spirograph) wheels
I would hardly consider their narrow test condition temperature (-2C or 28F) as "winter" representative especially for Norway. Anything below -10C a heat pump's energy advantage is relatively irrelevant. At -10C a Kona EV loose 30% battery capacity, at -20C around 40%, -30C its usually more than 50%. It would be the same for all current EVs in North America market. There is no magic sauce in the batteries or electronics when it gets really cold.And here's EV winter range comparison done in Norway. Korean EV's outperformed other manufacturers, with Kona only 9% below the advertised range while typical range loss in winter is 20% across EVs. Looks like main culprit is the heat pump. Korean EVs came with heat pump standard. I heard this 'revolutionary' option will become available (standard?) in Tesla soon.
Edited link address:
https://insideevs.com/news/404632/winter-range-test-best-evs-cold-weather/
Not a production model so some imperfections are still there, but a very nice overview inside and out.
I have seen a video or videos showing the parcel shelf. I believe it was on the Facebook Live German video that got taken down.I notice the absence of a rear "parcel shelf" from all these videos.
Any idea if its been removed from these demonstrator cars just to give easier camera access shots of the interior, or if it was never intended due to the back & forth movement of the rear seats?
Thanks, I was getting worried it had been removed like the rear wiper motor!
Just hope production models also come with the option of a spare wheel
I know someone with a regular Ioniq Electric car - no rear wiper on that model either.
What about heated windscreens, got one on my Evoque & its brilliant at clearing ice & snow, but any idea if on I5?
Perhaps they are applying the Italian driving rulebook:No rear wiper is very, very close to being a deal-breaker. Unless they can absolutely prove that their window stays clean in a salty, sandy, dusty, sloppy, Canadian winter and spring...no way. It's ridiculous to put thousands of dollars of safety equipment and software onboard but not a $50 wiper assembly.
It’s one thing to clear back window with airflow, but I hope they have a wiper on the reversing camera. They are even more susceptible to water, mud, etc. Makes it hard (impossible?) to reverse out of parking spots if both window & camera are obscured.