REVEALED: The open road range of South Africa’s small electric city cars

Small electric vehicles (EVs) with compact battery packs are best suited to the sort of stop-start driving scenarios most often experienced in bustling cities.

Here, the positive impact of regenerative braking – which sees what would otherwise be wasted kinetic energy, topping up the battery – is significant, allowing more kilometres to be squeezed out between charges.

But while stop-start traffic is the enemy of economy in internal combustion engine-powered cars, battery-powered vehicles actually thrive in such conditions. But what happens when two city-centric EVs – the BMW i3s and the Mini Cooper SE – hit the open road?

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This pair was tested at the Annual South African Electric Car Test, an assessment designed to evaluate a car’s ability to travel distance on a typically hot South African day, at a steady 120 km/h on a single charge without using regenerative braking.

ALSO READ: Audi rolls out all-electric e-tron range in style

The inaugural test, which was supported by AutoTrader, set a national benchmark for each available EV. It laid down a historical reference point to look back on and allows consumers to evaluate battery performance advancements as more options are added to the local market each year.

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During the event at the Gerotek High Speed Oval, the BMW i3s e-drive REx managed a distance of 168.527 km at a true speed of 120.02 km/h. This model is fitted with a petrol-powered range-extender, but for this test the fuel tank was emptied beforehand.

For the record, the 135 kW/270 Nm BMW i3s has an advertised range of 285 km from its 37.9 kWh battery. It is capable of reaching 100 km/h in a claimed 7.7 seconds and bears an average list price of R616 310, according to AutoTrader data covering the whole of 2021.

The BMW i3s covered a distance of 168km in an open road test on a single charge.

The Mini Cooper SE, meanwhile, employs a smaller battery with a net capacity of 28.9 kWh. It reaches 100 km/h three-tenths of a second faster than its i3s cousin, but has a lower advertised range of 215 km.

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With an average list price of R612 010 on AutoTrader in 2021, the three-door Cooper SE returned a single-charge distance of 147.730 km at a GPS-verified 119 km/h. For a city car designed to excel in urban environments rather than on the highway, this open-road range is a commendable effort.

“The maximum claimed ranges of these EVs are well advertised. This open-road simulation provides an indication of just how far consumers would be able to travel on a single charge if they were driving non-stop at the national speed limit on a South African summer’s day,” says George Mienie, AutoTrader’s CEO.

Currently, the BMW i3s, the Mini Cooper SE, Porsche Taycan, Jaguar I-Pace and Volvo XC40 P8 Recharge are the only EVs available in South Africa.

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While a few large EVs are scheduled to launch locally in 2022 like Audi’s e-tron range, the smallest battery-powered model on its way to South Africa in the near future is the new Mercedes-Benz EQA. Though it will serve as the entry point to the Stuttgart-based firm’s all-electric line-up, Mercedes has yet to confirm which derivatives will be offered locally.

For more information on the BMW i3s, click here.

For more information on the Mini Cooper SE, click here.

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By Citizen Reporter