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Entries in iMiev (3)

Saturday
Dec122009

25-iMievs now at large in the UK public hands. 

This post could be about the driving experience of the iMiev, or the fact that the iMiev launch today is the first mainstream production electric car to be released ever in the UK. (Okay, so back in the late 1990s we had the PSA electric vans and cars, but even they weren’t for public use - at least - not initially.) No, this post is about the future, and the hope that gives me. 

Today, I was among one of the lucky people to be present in Birmingham’s Centenary square to witness the launch of the Mitsubishi iMiev in the UK. Okay, so Mitsubishi had a few cars on the road before then - but they were strictly test/publicity vehicles. Today, twenty-five lucky people drove home in one. 

Sadly for me, I don’t live close enough to the CABLED test area so I wasn’t eligible to take part. But believe me, I certainly wanted to take part! (Hopefully I can find an iMiev of my own very soon)

While at the launch I was able to get some really nice photos of the event, including some fast-continuous ones. I even got to have a quick spin around the block in Mike Boxwell’s iMiev. (Yes he got one!)

 

 

Thanks so much to Mitsubishi UK and CABLED for making such a great event. It was pitched just right. It wasn’t full of pomp and ceremony. It wasn’t high-brow. It was a bunch of folks, congregating together with just the right amount of purpose to illustrate that the twenty-five electric cars leaving that day were in fact the start of something big, something incredible.  There was free coffee and pastries and circus performers and face-painters kept the children happy. 

And there was a huge cross-section of community there from the well-known to the unknown. Celebrity car journalist Quentin Willson rubbed shoulders with young, enthusiastic families ready to take their new ride home for the first time.  Retired couples and grown up families congregated around some cars, whilst teenagers drooled over others. There really was a real slice of society represented. 

And that’s something cool, because before now electric vehicles were viewed as being a complete niche vehicle; something which either the very rich or the very desperate drove. Today I didn’t get that impression. Today, there were normal people, driving what looked like a very normal car. Were it not for the writing on each and every car proclaiming the car’s green credentials it’d not even get a second look. 

So now we have the iMiev to sit squarely between the GWiz’s laughable dimensions, speed and notorious spec and the drool-worthy pant-wetting specs of the Tesla. Okay, so the iMiev isn’t cheap yet (participants are forking out £350+ a month for the privaledge to take part in this first round of iMiev roll-outs), but it is expected to come down in price within a few years. Enough, in fact, that it’ll be within most folk’s price range. 

While you may not be a fan of the iMiev styling (I am) you can rest assured that this won’t be the last EV from Mitsubishi, nor will it be the last EV to hit the UK streets. In fact, many more cars are set to hit Birmingham and Coventry streets in coming weeks as the CABLED scheme rolls out more marques. This is the turning point we’ve all be waiting for. This is the turning point that makes my job a joy and a whole-lot easier. This is a day I will remember for many years to come. 

If you see one of these cute vehicles give them a wave. And if you are overtaken by one don’t feel ashamed; the performance of these puppies is certainly a remedy for many a milk-float blues. The iMiev is just getting it’s own back. 

If you’d like to hear the EVcast which followed the event, in which I was lucky enough to be joined by Mitsubishi UK MD Lance Bradley as well as Neil Butcher from the Arup Vehicle Design Group, Mike Boxwell and Robert Llewellyn (all new iMiev owners) please head over to the EVcast homepage

 

Saturday
May162009

It's official. The iMiev is on it's way.

According to The Register, the Mitsubishi iMiev will be available in the UK from November. Perfect timing then for those EV enthusiasts with £20,000 to burn and a space on their Christmas list. [caption id="attachment_1186" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="The iMiev is coming, but only 50 of them to start with."]The iMiev is coming, but only 50 of them to start with.[/caption] Sadly, only fifty of the cars will be available at the end of the year. I suspect this will mean that they will have a waiting list longer than those fifty cars, placed end-to-end. But Mitsubishi are promising another 150 next year. Depending on features, the iMiev will retail for between £20,000 and £25,000. That puts it squarely in the same price bracket as a high end Toyota Prius, and a good £5-10,000 more expensive than the GWiz Lithium Ion and the new Ev'ie. However, I'm still excited. The original i, which has now sold out of all the UK stocks (and Mitsubishi has no plans to import any more of the non electric i) was a really nice drive and I'm hoping the iMiev is even better than the petrol version. Of course, only time will tell. However, I was at the local Mitsubishi dealership on Wednesday and bumped into two of Mitsubishi's head office team. Hopefully, they're arranging a sneak test-drive before the car goes public in the UK. Watch this space.
Monday
Mar302009

Out in the wild (Well, almost)

We're at an exciting time in the world of the EV. If the world's automakers can be believed, electric cars are anything from a few months to a few years away. (Let's not concentrate on the recent statement that VW's CEO made, stating that EVs are 15-20 years away. I suspect he didn't view the film Who Killed The Electric Car? Ah well.) In the UK things are still moving frustratingly slow, but if the information from my local Mitsubishi dealer can be believed I should be getting a test drive in an iMiev very soon. They should be up for sale, apparently, by year's end. That's ahead of what Mitsubishi's corporate gurus are saying. I hope it's sooner. I drove a gas version last year and was impressed with it's handling and size. The only wrong thing was the noise from the small Diesel engine. That's not going to be an issue with the iMiev of course. If Daryll, the EV Nut's little trip in the iMiev is representative of what is to come then we're in for a treat. And then Smart, who have the ED out. Our local Smart dealership is supposedly the service and distribution center for the south-west of England. But at the moment the closest I got to them was being told that yes, they did have a fleet of six out the back and no, I couldn't go for a test drive in one. Apparently there's two in Bristol, but incognito. I'm about as close to running into one as I am to meeting the Queen. Not that much. In a few years, if the tests go well, Mercedes Smart should come to market with the Smart ED. Price wise, I'm expecting it to be not that much cheaper than the iMiev. That's an easy choice then. Sometimes though, electric cars do get out in the wild. Apparently, the iMiev was out and about in Gloucester. Martin, the owner of the Electrotrabi, snapped a few photos a week or so back while one of the UK registered iMievs was out and about. Then, one of my former students, Dan, an oboe major at Birmingham Conservertoire, snapped this trio of caged EVs in Birmingham City Centre. dsc00628 If I'm right, it's a Smart ED, an iMiev and one I can't quite figure out. If you can work it out, please let me know. I just wish these cars weren't so caged up. They belong on our streets and in our EV charging stations. As we're getting more charging points we're going to need some EVs to use them!