China’s BYD doesn’t mess around. It began life as a battery company that eventually realized it could branch out into electrified cars. And so it did. Today, BYD is outselling rival giants and has cars on the road almost everywhere, except the US. Its eyes are firmly set on conquering the electric vehicle sector, but it will sell you a hybrid if you’re not quite ready to take on life with a battery EV full-time.
Being a thoroughly modern car company, BYD will sell you cars in various shapes and sizes and across a wide price range, though the bigger you go, the higher the price tag becomes. With popular sentiment starting to turn against this second gilded age, the super-lux stuff won’t suit everyone. That’s where BYD’s smallest car, the Dolphin, comes into play.
Small is, of course, a relative term. An original Issigonis Mini it is not, but it makes a Range Rover Evoque look big. It’s tall, but it’s narrow enough that it will fit in a European parking space with room to open the doors. You won’t miss it in a parking lot, either.
Ocean Aesthetics
BYD’s “Ocean Aesthetics” design language is a mixed bag. On its larger cars, it flows rather neatly; here, it’s a touch awkward. The fact that you can get the Dolphin in pale pink or two-tone combos helps it stand out further. The rear light graphics are pleasingly twisty, but the ‘Build Your Dreams’ motif stamped on the back received such backlash when BYD launched in the UK that the company said it would stop putting its well-meaning but saccharine company motto on the back of cars.
The Dolphin is tall because it has to be. On the floor is a Blade Battery, BYD’s proprietary battery tech. It forms part of the structure of the car and is super-stiff, and it can be pierced with a nail and not go pop. As party tricks go, that’s a neat one. There are two battery sizes to choose from: a 44.9 kWh unit or, as tested, the 60.4 kWh pack, which will get you 265 miles (426 km) on a charge, according to the WLTP scheme, while feeding a 201 hp (150 kW) motor.
Loading comments...