PALO ALTO, Calif.—After what has felt like an interminable wait since our brief taster at CES last year, we finally landed some proper seat time with the new Chevrolet Bolt. It’s the most convincing battery electric vehicle (BEV) to emerge thus far from one of the traditional automakers, a ground-up design with clever packaging and a 60kWh battery that gives it a range of 238 miles (383km). And until Tesla’s Model 3 goes into production later this year, it’s the only reasonably affordable long-range BEV on the market.
It’s not entirely surprising that Chevrolet was the first of the traditional OEMs to respond to Tesla. Parent General Motors tried to make EVs viable in the early 1990s with the EV1, perhaps a little too soon before battery technology made the leaps it has. More recently, it has sold more than 110,000 plug-in hybrid EVs in the form of the first– and second-generation Volt. While the Bolt obviously benefits from this institutional know-how, the new car is a ground-up design, not an evolution of its PHEV platform.
The specs
The monocoque body is a complex mix of different strength steels that package a skateboard layout for the powertrain. The car’s 60kWh lithium-ion battery pack lives between each axle, connected to a motor-generator unit that drives the front wheels. It’s a 150kW (200hp), 266lb-ft (360Nm) permanent magnetic drive MGU, preferred by GM’s engineers for its reliability, efficiency, and volume production. Range is a decent 238 miles (383km)—more than enough for a couple days of driving for most of us.
Wrapped around the steel monocoque is an attractive, almost-one-box shape; we’d call it a hatchback, but Chevrolet prefers to think of it as a small crossover. It’s the work of GM’s South Korean design studio under the lead of Stuart Norris. Like the BMW i3, we think it looks best in “stormtrooper” white (not the color’s actual name). However, it’s not the slipperiest shape in the world, with a drag coefficient (Cd) of 0.32; by comparison a Tesla Model S has a Cd of 0.24, and the Chevrolet Volt 0.28.


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