Bay of Plenty Times

In the PINK

Our long-term BYD Dolphin brightened up the office carpark in many different ways

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Atrue test of a long-term car is not necessaril­y the factsand-figures stuff, but whether we still look forward to driving it when it’s become a familiar member of the fleet and whether we truly feel sad when it goes. Our three-month BYD Dolphin gets a big tick on both counts.

We weren’t bored with the Dolphin by any means, but for our last two weeks we thought we’d switch it up visually by swapping our Atlantis Grey test car for a rather striking Coral Pink one in an identical specificat­ion. The pink extends to the interior, too, with some cream and lavender for good measure. Ostensibly shocking, but actually many people thought the whole colour scheme was great and really suited the car.

BYD’S supermini-sized hatchback is not the perfect vehicle by any means. But our enthusiasm for it really developed when we started to discover just how fit-forpurpose it was. Like many

“owners”, we used the Dolphin as an urban commuter and trafficter­ror, and in this context it’s fantastic.

We voted Dolphin the Best BEV of 2023, partly thanks to BYD’S industry-leading battery technology, but also because it makes urban EV driving fun. It was also a finalist for the overall award, ultimately beaten by the MG4.

Ours was the Extended Range model, with a 427km WLTP rating. It consistent­ly did more than that on each full charge; to be honest that’s more than a city car really needs. But the $5k-cheaper Standard Range (340km) has a lot less power and less sophistica­ted rear suspension, so we’re happy we stuck with the bigger battery.

We love the seat comfort and cabin architectu­re: not as polarising as the Atto 3 (at least not in darker tones!) and actually quite stylish, although there’s plenty of Ocean Series-themed detail there to find, like gills on the dashboard or pectoral-fin door handles.

We’ve talked about BYD’S voice assistant in reference to the Atto 3 and Seal, and it’s equally good here.

BYD is a very digital company, but there are also plenty of physical controls for important cabin functions. We like that. If only the scroll audio volume control didn’t double as the off button, because so many times you reach for it, accidental­ly tap it and . . . you’ve lost your entertainm­ent.

So much to like. And yes, a lot that’s not quite there yet. The Bydsignatu­re rotating screen is a nice novelty, but it’s hard to read in portrait mode while wearing polarised sunglasses — nor does it display Apple Carplay or Android Auto (both wireless) unless it’s in landscape.

The comfort suspension we love, the less-than-grippy Linglong Comfort Master tyres we don’t. The chirps away from the lights are fun, but the understeer and wetweather anxiety aren’t.

The Dolphin is lavishly equipped with a huge range of driver assists, but as with so many modern cars, they don’t always work well. The lane-assist is over-eager and at times just aggressive and jerky; BYD NZ says it’s getting engineers here at some stage to calibrate it better for Kiwi roads.

The speed limit warning is less than reliable (sometimes it reads signs correctly, other times it doesn’t) and the chiming quite insistent.

Yes, you can turn it all off. But it’s not that easy to do and it all defaults to the on-position at startup. We did learn a more convenient shortcut that you can set up to disable the speed warning when we attended the Seal launch last year (thanks, BYD people).

Lots of carmakers are really grappling with getting this active safety stuff to work reliably without driving you crazy. And BYD is one of the more proactive makers with OTA, so there’s always potential for your Dolphin to get better.

We had two OTA updates during our time with the car: one modified the fake engine noise to make it less intrusive and added an “off” option (that was good), another increased the volume of the speed warning . . . without improving the speed warning system’s accuracy (that was bad, obviously).

But overall, we loved our time with BYD’S baby. It was so often first choice when we had a short way to go and a short time to get there; it helped make city living fun.

The Dolphin has something so many small cars and/or EVS lack, and that’s character. It’s just so good at its chosen field. It did become part of the family over those three months and as much as it’s a cliche to say so, we will really miss it.

 ?? Photos / David Linklater ??
Photos / David Linklater
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