The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Jag’s first electric car hits the pace

Stunning F-Pace on sale now with £59k price tag.

- Jack MckeoWn MoToring ediTor

Jaguar has revealed prices for the most hotly anticipate­d car of 2018.

The all-electric I-Pace is available to order now with prices starting at £63,495 – brought down to £58,995 once the Government’s £4,500 electric car grant has been subtracted.

That’s not cheap but it’s a significan­t amount less than its closest rival, Tesla’s Model X, which starts at around £75,000.

Penned by Jaguar’s Scottish head of design Ian Callum, it’s a stunning looking car.

Callum and his team could have taken the easy route of putting batteries and an electric motor into one of Jaguar’s other SUVs, the F-Pace and E-Pace.

Instead they have come up with a bespoke piece of design that mixes SUV credential­s with the dynamism of the XJ.

A short, low bonnet, aero-enhanced roof design and curved rear screen allows it to achieve a drag co-efficient to just 0.29Cd. That aerodynami­c shape means the electric motors don’t have to work as hard, improving range.

Jaguar says the I-Pace will be able to travel just shy of 300 miles on a single charge.

That’s lower than the 351 miles claimed by the longest range model of Tesla Model X (which you have to pay £93,000 for) but much farther than any other electric car currently on sale.

The battery pack slots in under the floor, meaning the I-Pace has much more passenger space than its modest 4.86m by 2.14m dimensions would suggest.

Jaguar says each passenger has 89cm of legroom and the absence of a transmissi­on tunnel allows for a central 10.5 litre storage compartmen­t.

The boot is a capacious 656 litres and there’s a 30 litre compartmen­t under the bonnet that stores the charging cables.

The battery pack brings the I-Pace’s weight up to more than two tonnes but a very low centre of gravity means it should grip the road well.

Power is provided by two electric motors, giving the I-Pace four-wheel drive.

Using a home wall charger takes around 10 hours to get the battery up to 80% , so it can be charged overnight.

The 50kw public fast chargers that are now common will take it to 80% in 85 minutes, while the 100kw rapid chargers due to be rolled out over the next couple of years will do it in just 45 minutes.

The I-Pace will go from 0-62mph in 4.5 seconds. That’s well off the pace of a Tesla Model X equipped with “ludicrous mode,” which does it in 2.9 seconds (although you pay £129,000 for the privilege) but still faster than a Porsche 911. Top speed is 124mph.

Premium fully electric cars are due from BMW, Mercedes, Audi and Volvo but Jaguar is the first mainstream premium manufactur­er to get theirs to market. With superb looks and comparativ­ely keen pricing, the I-Pace looks like a winner.

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 ??  ?? The all-electric Jaguar I-Pace can manage 298 miles on a single change. It’s available to order now with prices starting at £58,995 once the £4,500 electric car grant is taken into account.
The all-electric Jaguar I-Pace can manage 298 miles on a single change. It’s available to order now with prices starting at £58,995 once the £4,500 electric car grant is taken into account.
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