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Volvo XC40 82 kWh AWD 1000 km challenge

Volvo XC40 82 kWh AWD 1000 km challenge

#Volvo #XC40 #kWh #AWD #challenge

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45 Comments

  1. I like your real-world tests, but I think it does not make too much sense to compare cars directly when the temperature is so different.
    I would suggest that you really pick at least one car and test it under different conditions. Try this Volvo at summer conditions. I agree with you that you will get a way better time. Maybe also at rainy whether. That way, we get a better understanding of how much the conditions affect driving.
    Last summer, I drove with my Polestar 2 from Stockholm to my favorite Ionity station at Granna and almost ran out of juice since it was raining. The consumption was way higher than normal.

  2. Good time, an autobahn cruiser such as lowly VW Passat TDI (way less expensive than this Volvo) would do it in 8 hours without breaking a swet but that time for an EV is OK. Holding on on my diesel Passat for the time being. Awaiting the Sodium battery equiped much cheaper EVs (regarding current EVs, why would I pay more for less range ?).

  3. Would the charging speed improve if you went deeper? Indeed, in summer the challenge will take 10:30 or less. Looking forward to the single motor long range test too. These seats are upholstered in real wool – also a nice Swedish touch.

  4. 16:30 I've always thought a brick has a drag coefficient of 1.0, so I've looked it up: several sources say it actually is 1.05.
    edit – correcting: A brick is undefined (different w/l/h ratios possible), the 1.05 is for a cube (or a 1/1/1 brick)

  5. In resume only 2 cars are acceptable the ID3 62kw and the 2023 Citroen eC4 all the others are s….t caring around expensive and useless batteries for nothing which is desastrouse from resources point of view and a pure waist of money buying such vehicles. Your reviews are excellent and your xls spreadsheet is great as it shows the facts nothing but the facts! Keep on I really like your reviews.

  6. Honest question. When on a road trip, doesn’t these constant long charging pauses become exhausting/irritating? If you’re driving 120 km/h they become quite frequent. Stopping and charging every 2.5 h for 30 min just seems as a step back in terms of human development.

  7. It's so nice that the navigation if good. The quality and comfort are Volvo. But that consumption is crazy. It is a compact suv and not so aerodinamic but there must be something wrong in the electric area.

  8. Driving 1000km in -10C degrees is nowhere near real world use. Not doing more than 2-300km in these conditions – where max 1 stop is required. With average conditions, driving 100 kmph the consomption would be around 22-25kwh / 100km.
    Shouldnt be scared away from this wonderful car.

  9. As always a great video. The consumption is pretty ridiculous for that rather low speed (120kmh is far below the speed limit here in CZ, leave alone Germany) even at the very low temperature.

    Quality is great though…

  10. Swedish route is the best one 😊 Just dont drive thru Ucklum around 15-18 mon-fri and it will go pretty fast. Next time maybe you should put in a picture of the landslide in the video. It will take 2-3 years to repair the road.

    There is a few new Mer fast chargers at Torp köpcentrum close to Coop. Very close to highway if you need to stop there.

  11. Can you do a video about the status of the Easee charger situation? It’s not clear to me if they will survive, despite having an awesome product. Peter Esse, the Swedish tech YouTuber has been trash talking Easee.

  12. The 14 degree Celsius difference is more than sufficient for a 10% increase of energy consumption.

    It would have been a sub 10h:30m run with an average temperature of around 6 degrees.

  13. I really don’t get why there’s this trend to do not efficiently design cars. In the future when electricity prices will go much higher this will be a serious downside if you own such a car. I’d not consider anything other than Tesla for an EV.

  14. Not really that cold in central Europe. You might have colder than usual locally, but there is no pan-european cold wave.
    Above average temperatures here if anything, not even freezing most of the time unless you go to higher places 🙂

  15. My Hyundai Ioniq 6 RWD can drive at 100 kmh and get a consumption of as little as 14kWh/100km (140Wh/km in your measure). On a trip down the coast two days ago I drove 97 km mostly at 100 kmh on a freeway and the consumption was 12.9kWh/100km. So this Volvo brick is a POS really.

  16. Thank god for fabric seats. I hate leather seats with a passion. When I bought my XC60 it came standard with leather seats and I "downgraded" so I didn't have so slide around on those stupid things.

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