Friday, August 18, 2017

Record Setting and Righteously Stacked: Chevy Bolt at Top of Consumer Reports' Electric-Vehicle Range

St Louis is a metro area that is full of people who are working on deadlines, with very long to-do lists and multiple meeting reminders. Those in the financial sector, teachers, innovators of tech, and students are all commuting to and from their destinations at all hours of the day. When all-electric vehicles first were a distant blip on the horizon, big city dwellers, for the most part, did not have their hopes up high. If the distance that any vehicle was able to go was not that far, the excitement and novelty of the idea seemed to wear off quickly, and many stages of innovation, as well as testing, were needed.



Reaching 250 miles on a single charge, we are proud of the Bolt: it set the winning mark for the all-electric vehicle range in Consumer Reports' testing. In the electric-vehicle range test, the Bolt was pitted against the 2016 Tesla Model S 75D, which ran out of power at 235 miles, and the Bolt victoriously chugged on for another 15 miles. It should be noted that the Tesla Model X 90D has been upgraded to a longer-range 100D, and while it is true that this would probably beat out the Bolt, the cost usually boils down to the very lofty six-figure range.
The ways in which Consumer Reports tests cars involve many different types of driving, but the majority of it is a steady 65 mph on a highway. To ensure accuracy and a well-rounded result, testing is usually completed with the air conditioning and heater off. It's not just the range alone that deems the Bolt such an honored contestant: its very quiet cabin, as well as the agility factor rendered it excellent for commuters looking to plug in and help bolster the environment. Built around a large 60-kWh batter pack situated under the car's floor, a full charge takes around 9 hours.



You'll easily be able to seat 2 in the front, and 3 in the rear, and be pulling your power from a 200-hp electric engine. The presence of a 10.2-inch touchscreen is stellar for a car on the smaller side such as this, and an 8.0-inch digital gauge cluster that faces the driver for convenience. With the arrival of the Chevy Bolt, the electric car as a whole reaches a champion milestone, and a large jump to widespread appeal. The fact that electric cars have navigated the trenches with enough value and deep roots to appeal to consumers is here to stay, and even If Tesla suffers a treacherous fate, customers are now poised and ready. There is going to come a day when the EV market is ripe enough that consumers will care about far more than mileage and cost, and when it arrives, the Bolt has laid the acceptable amount of groundwork to evoke a very polished shine.