Wheels (Australia)

In full gear

Pours petrol on ye old pipe and slippers

- BYRON MATHIOUDAK­IS

Included in the Ioniq Electric Elite is a stack of active safety equipment, parking sensors, rear camera, 16-inch alloy wheels, an 8-inch touchscree­n with sat nav plus Apple Carplay and Android Auto, a smart key and auto headlights and wipers. Stump up another four grand for the Premium model and you’ll get leather heated and ventilated seats, wireless phone charging, LED headlights, front parking sensors and a glass sunroof. Only around 18 of the Australian network of 170 Hyundai dealers will be authorised to carry the car.

THE 1948 XK120. 1961 E-type. 1968 XJ. Jaguar has a history of smashing moulds, and into that elite group quietly rolls the I-pace.

Engineered in Britain (good) and built in Austria (great), the battery electric dual-motor AWD fivedoor, five-seater crossover is conceptual­ly similar to the epochal Tesla Model S, which it has been designed to conquest (brilliant), but – 400km-plus claimed range aside – that’s where the similariti­es cease between the luxury EV grand tourers.

Be prepared for a shock (no pun intended) when first encounteri­ng the I-pace in person, with its nearmonobo­x proportion­s and cab-forward silhouette that’s pure concept car. Wearing the optional 22-inch alloys certainly adds to the drama.

It’s inside, though, that the hushed EV really amps up the glamour, with what is undoubtedl­y Jaguar’s most alluring presentati­on in modern times, underscore­d by an elegant dashboard that’s big on intuitive ease, tactility and quality, sumptuous seating with an SUV altitude and space to spare for five (thanks to nearly three metres of wheelbase) and a flawless driving position. It’s even practical with 656L of cargo capacity. Some lower-lying plastics that seem beneath the brand, the lack of a sun block-out blind for the $3380 glass roof, and the odd rattle in these pre-production examples are the only real initial cabin disappoint­ments.

We ought to save the superlativ­es for the I-pace’s driveabili­ty, however, since in no way does the Coventry Cat feel like a luxo SUV barge. Quite the contrary; engage ‘drive’ and the sole (for now) EV400’S moon-shot accelerati­on is literally akin to mainlining speed; terrifical­ly tactile steering and tenacious grip allow for Olympics-level iceskater alacrity (hooray for mass-saving 94 percent aluminium constructi­on, double wishbone front suspension, a multi-link rear, and 50/50 weight distributi­on) and the ride – sampled on 20-inch wheels and steel springs through to optional air suspension and 22s – varies from cushy to comfy.

There was little to sour our initial I-pace taste – our available range readout fluctuated wildly, halving quickly for around 300km of real-world distance – someway short of the claimed 480km; the $2K air suspension did occasional­ly induce a queasy motion over speed humps; and even a mild raid of the options cupboard can have prices soaring well over $150K.

Still, imaginatio­n runs rife throughout this beguiling new luxury crossover slingshot from Great Britain. For decades its glittering back catalogue mired Jaguar into retro pastiche when instead it should have inspired the brand to innovate.

That’s what the I-pace is all about. Breakthrou­gh and break free. Company founder Sir William Lyons would be proud.

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