Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

If you like Teslas and tech, VW offers the ID.4 Pro

- SCOTT STURGIS Scott Sturgis is a freelance auto writer; mrdriverss­eat@gmail.com.

Volkswagen ID.4 Pro: The Volkswagen of EVs? Price: Starts at $39,995 Convention­al wisdom: Consumer Reports calls it “pleasant-driving,” “functional” and “competitiv­ely priced,” but that many controls “come across as gimmicky for the sake of seeming high-tech, and the ID.4’s first version to market doesn’t burst with accelerati­on.”

Marketer’s pitch: “The ID4 EV: Winner of the World Car of the Year 2021.” But you can only build and reserve it. Maybe next year?

Reality: The Volkswagen of Teslas.

Catching up: Last week, I introduced the ID.4 as I prepared to take it for a short vacation. This week will focus more on the driving experience.

German engineerin­g: I thought Volkswagen would give us another way of looking at the future of EVs. But I didn’t sense a whole lot of Volkswagen­ness in the ID.4.

Up to speed: The ID4 electric motor creates 201 horsepower, which gets the small SUV to 60 mph in 7.4 seconds, according to Motor Trend. Full tilt only comes using Sport mode.

The all-wheel-drive version — not yet available — sports 295 horses and a 0-60 times of 5.7 seconds, Volkswagen says.

On the road: The handling is fine in this rear-engine, rear-drive SUV, but nothing to get excited about, and certainly not up to Volkswagen’s legendary fun vehicles. It’s kind of … Beetley, without 50 years of wear and tear softening things up.

Even in Sport mode it doesn’t really have a lot of zip. The steering tightened up but there was not a lot of joy.

Driver’s Seat: Comfy and supportive, the ID.4 seat made a nice companion for the 350 miles or so I drove it during test week.

Friends and stuff: Plenty of room for a family of four adults to take a threeday vacation with lots of stuff. Beyond that it might get a little crowded.

Legroom, headroom and foot room are all generous. Sturgis Kid 4.0 reports the seat was firm and straight, though. And the middle seat in has just as much legroom as the rest, as there’s no hump at all.

Stop and start: A car that starts only when you sit in the driver’s seat turns out to be a giant pain. Picture yourself traveling with family or friends — how many times does the driver want to leave the vehicle but keep the vehicle running? A quick stop at the store, a need to fish something out of the hatch

— I was surprised how often this came up.

Plus, someday it’s going to fail, and the diagnostic­s alone will cost hundreds.

Play some tunes: Volkswagen has always offered nice infotainme­nt controls — buttons, a couple knobs, and an easy touchscree­n.

But the cool kids got their hands on the ID.4, and so now you have … a Tesla. The touchscree­n operates everything, and there are just a few buttons on the outside. Nothing will operate when the vehicle is in motion, and things don’t operate easily when it’s not.

There’s home button on the screen, like on an iPhone, so once you’re used to that, it becomes easier.

On the bright side, sound from the system is awesome.

Keeping warm and cool: Volkswagen has also long offered user-friendly HVAC controls, but the ID.4 HVAC is in the touchscree­n as well. Fortunatel­y, the “buttons” are big and easy to see.

But the user-unfriendly controls turned out to be the least of the problems.

As for cooling, max AC was required for most of a long trip in the 90-plus temperatur­es. I got to wondering how this would handle an Arizona heat wave. (Or, because202­1, a Vancouver one.)

From the rear, Sturgis Kid 4.0 complained that the low vents in the console don’t help cooling much, especially up high where, you know, the heat rises to.

With the low dashboard vents, I also had to keep the defrost control on for much of the trip, and of course the windshield started to fog a little.

Electricit­y consumptio­n: I didn’t drive my usual full-tilt way, keeping it between 70 and 75 on the highway and moving more gently around town. I was mostly able to keep the range as advertised.

Indoorsy: It was hot as blazes inside the ID.4 Pro after that charging. The materials and the colors need to be much lighter and reflective, because so much energy is going to be devoted to cooling the vehicle that every little bit helps.

And the ID.4 knew this. After having the car parked in a garage overnight, the range read 220 miles, so obviously the ID.4 was factoring that heat in as well.

Night shift: The lights sit frustratin­gly low. Leave the automatic high beams on because you’ll need them as often as you can get them.

Where it’s built: Chattanoog­a, Tennessee, as of 2022.

How it’s built: Consumer Reports predicts the reliabilit­y to be a 2 out of 5, though honestly there’s not a lot of data out there yet.

In the end: Volkswagen needs to believe in what it’s been doing enough to keep doing it even when the fuel source changes. Keep making fun, sporty, intuitive cars, whether electric or gas. The ID.4 isn’t that.

Bright side, a Volkswagen could conceivabl­y have fewer problems than a Tesla. Down side, all those chargers you can’t access.

My excitement for the long-promised ID.Buzz microbus has been significan­tly diminished.

 ?? Volkswagen photos ?? The 2021 Volkswagen ID.4 Pro uses a 201-horsepower electric motor to power the rear wheels but will have an all-wheel-drive version coming this fall.
Volkswagen photos The 2021 Volkswagen ID.4 Pro uses a 201-horsepower electric motor to power the rear wheels but will have an all-wheel-drive version coming this fall.
 ??  ?? The 2021 Volkswagen ID.4 Pro is handsome and stylish inside, but functional­ity can be spotty.
The 2021 Volkswagen ID.4 Pro is handsome and stylish inside, but functional­ity can be spotty.

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