Weekend Herald

Minimalism TO THE MAX

It’s the smallest, fastest and most ecofriendl­y EV (and SUV) Volvo has ever built, but is the EX30 actually good?

-

The Volvo EX30 may be the smallest Volvo currently on sale, the smallest SUV the company has ever built and the smallest EV it has so far built, but it actually packs a couple of rather big firsts for the company.

Not only does it have the smallest lifetime carbon footprint of any Volvo, it is also (in twin motor guise) the fastest accelerati­ng Volvo ever made as well.

Yep, that twin motor variant will sprint to 100km/h in a feral 3.6 seconds, but the rest of the range isn’t exactly slow either, with the entry level single motor RWD model knocking off the 0-100 sprint in less than 6 seconds, while the long range RWD variant we drive here will do it in 5.3 seconds.

However, while the performanc­e is impressive, it actually takes second place to that other first: the carbon footprint thing.

Yeah, yeah, I know — all that carbon footprint stuff is murky and boring, but the thing is, the EX30’s carbon footprint actually shapes the way it was designed and built to probably a larger degree than any other car on sale today.

The car you see here is an EX30 Single Motor Extended Range model, meaning that it gets a 69kWh nickel manganese cobalt (NMC) battery with a WLTP range of up to 476km, and a single 203kW/ 343Nm electric motor on the rear axle.

Volvo says the production footprint of the EX30 is slightly more than that of the petrol XC40, but its total lifetime footprint of 30 tonnes over 200,000km is actually under half the XC40’s.

While the body uses 25 per cent recycled aluminium, 17 per cent recycled steel and 17 per cent recycled plastic, the interior also uses large amounts of recycled materials but the cleverest part also contribute­s to the fact that the EX30 is also the cheapest Volvo EV by a good margin, too.

This is most evident in the interior, which is minimalist even by Volvo standards — virtually all buttons and knobs have been banished in favour of a large vertical central touchscree­n, while the traditiona­l practice of scattering speakers all around the cabin in every available door and surface has been replaced with a single soundbar that stretches the full width of the dash.

Not only do things like this save significan­t amounts of weight, they

also handily reduce production costs, contributi­ng to both that low carbon footprint and price.

However, while all that is very noble and all, none of it matters if the end result isn’t pleasing to drive. And fortunatel­y, the Volvo EX30 is very pleasing indeed.

It’s actually pleasing in a number of ways, firstly (and most obviously) aesthetica­lly — the EX30 is an undeniably handsome small SUV, with taut, restrained surfaces and a fantastic rendition of the traditiona­l Volvo nose that sees no grille, as per modern EV styling, but instead the “face” is defined by a Volvo badge and a subtle diagonal stripe between chunky, pixelated versions of the “Thor’s Hammer” headlights.

Inside is that fantastica­lly minimalist interior that, as well as being defined by weight and cost savings, is also a wonderfull­y comfortabl­e (the seats are superb!) and, yes, even luxurious place.

There’s no attempt at fauxluxury via fake “vegan” leather here, rather all the interior materials are recycled (to some degree) from things like PET bottles, PVC, denim offcuts, or use renewable resources like flax fibre and cork.

And it all comes together beautifull­y well, with unique surfaces and textures that feel of a high quality, as well as nicely ‘different’ from the usual luxury fare of leather, metal or polished wood.

The clever use of a soundbar as opposed to speakers distribute­d around the cabin is a bit more of a mixed bag — while the sound quality is good and it does an admirable job of surroundin­g you in sound, it can’t quite manage the full immersion that a set of speakers all around you offers.

Still, this is a minor quibble. More irritating was the Google operating system’s weird inconsiste­ncies and bugs.

Often on start-up the system seemed to not boot up properly, with options and menus you know you used previously not showing up. Or at least you thought you knew. Or maybe you imagined it . . . Turns out, no, I didn’t imagine it and often menus like audio settings would suddenly have far fewer options. It was massively frustratin­g and led me to doubt my own memory (and, yes, sanity) on more than one occasion before I figured it out.

It turned out that the vehicle we drove was due an update that would fix this and a number of other small bugs, which makes sense, as we have never encountere­d this sort of flakiness from the same OS in other Volvo and Polestar cars.

But what about the meat of all this: how does it drive?

Rather well, actually. While the steering is quick off centre, it is very light and quite numb. However, it is extremely accurate and, once you get accustomed to its lightness, the EX30 feels nicely agile and responsive.

The ride is nicely absorbent and composed regardless of how you are driving it, making it a delightful open road cruiser that is also happy tackling a few bends. It can, however, get a tiny bit brittle at low speeds over rough surfaces, but it is never particular­ly intrusive.

Being a Volvo, the EX30 is packed with the latest safety and driverassi­st tech.

Some of this is excellent and some is excellent but also slightly annoying.

The driver attention warning system is slightly picky, but generally pretty accurate. The biggest fault with this system actually comes from another, however: the decision to move every control to the large central screen means you do need to look away to do anything, leaving you with a choice: pull to the side of the road to change anything (HVAC included) or be shouted at for not looking at the road.

Of course, the former is clearly the responsibl­e decision as well . . . lane assist can also be a bit too insistent and nibbles away at the steering wheel in an irritating fashion, but generally the EX30’s assists respond to your driving: if you drive it in an alert, yet relaxed manner (you know, like you should always drive), you’ll hear barely a peep from it.

Go into it stressed and in a hurry, however, then it will nag you constantly. Probably not what you want when you are stressed and in a hurry, but perhaps it is what you need . . . All up, the Volvo EX30 is a thoroughly excellent small electric SUV. The lack of buttons and overeager assists may put some off, but the underlying package is so damn good that it is a hard one to go past.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? THE ‘FACE’ IS DEFINED BY A VOLVO BADGE AND A SUBTLE DIAGONAL STRIPE BETWEEN CHUNKY, PIXELATED VERSIONS OF THE ‘THOR’S HAMMER’ HEADLIGHTS.
THE ‘FACE’ IS DEFINED BY A VOLVO BADGE AND A SUBTLE DIAGONAL STRIPE BETWEEN CHUNKY, PIXELATED VERSIONS OF THE ‘THOR’S HAMMER’ HEADLIGHTS.
 ?? Photos / Damien O’Carroll ?? The Volvo EX30 — the smallest but fastest accelerati­ng model yet.
Photos / Damien O’Carroll The Volvo EX30 — the smallest but fastest accelerati­ng model yet.
 ?? ?? DRIVENCARG­UIDE.CO.NZ
DRIVENCARG­UIDE.CO.NZ

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand