December 25, 2024

Westside People

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We’re Testing an Electric Mercedes That Can Go 747 Miles on a Single Charge

We're Testing an Electric Mercedes That Can Go 747 Miles on a Single Charge
I saw a Mercedes-Benz Vision EQXX hiding behind some potted plants
Zoom / There is only one Mercedes-Benz Vision EQXX, so bringing it back in one piece was a big deal.

Jonathan Gitlin

IMMENDINGEN, Germany – Driving in a Mercedes-Benz Vision EQXX was more stressful than I expected. Not only does that mean it’s hard to drive, or see out of the low-hanging chainsaw, but it’s also the only ones around. Mercedes won’t tell us the exact budget for the program, and simply warns us that the single EQXX should be considered invaluable, but I think somewhere in the range Three Bugatti Power Sports.

Like the Bugatti, the EQXX is designed for an engineering brief — in this case to build an electric vehicle capable of at least 621 miles (1,000 kilometers) on a single charge. Like the Bugatti, too, it’s road legal: In April of this year, less than two years after the project was given the go-ahead, the team drove the EV 625 miles (1,066 km) from Sindelfingen in Germany to Cassis, France, and arrived with a 15 percent charge case. percent in the battery.

Two months later, they followed up with a longer drive that included going down fewer mountains, and driving from Stuttgart, Germany to the Silverstone race track in the UK, where Formula E title holder Then Nyck de Vries used the remaining charge to drive some hot laps, and the car eventually completed 747 miles (1,202 km) before stopping in the pit lane.

But this is not Bugatti and there are no plans to run low-volume production, not even at very exorbitant prices. A one-off, the Vision EQXX is a concept car that comes alive, but it’s more fully realized than any other concept I’ve come across so far. A pure engineering or world record-breaking exercise You wouldn’t bother with a functional infotainment system that uses a single 44-inch 8k display, nor a fully adorned interior, even if it uses cactus fiber fabric instead of leather, bamboo fiber carpeting, and biotech-derived silk, among other innovations.

And despite the prized nature of this low-drag electric vehicle, Mercedes allowed Ars to drive the car.

It's an interesting shape, but it serves the laws of aerodynamics.
Zoom / It’s an interesting shape, but it serves the laws of aerodynamics.

Jonathan Gitlin

As you might imagine from the way it looks, the Vision EQXX’s shape is more than just aerodynamic optimized. About 62 percent of the work the engine has to do is counter the air resistance, after all. It’s a smaller car than it looks in the photos – about a foot shorter than the EQS produced at 195.9 inches. This includes the long, overhanging nose and tail, so the Vision EQXX’s wheelbase is actually the car’s short, at 110.2 in (2,800 mm).

A narrow 73.6-inch (1,870 mm) width and 53.1-inch (1,348 mm) lower roofline give the car a fairly small headroom—22.8 sq ft (2.12 m)—and the frontal area works with the drag coefficient, which in these Status is only 0.17, This makes it one of the least dragged cars ever.

From the nose to the C-pillar it might remind you of a Porsche Taycan, a very slippery customer. The doorknobs retract flushly into the doors, or at least do so in the front; Don’t open the rear doors, one of the few tells us this is a concept and not a production car.

Side view mirrors are a size you might expect to find in a race car rather than something wearing a license plate, but they work well enough. Which is a good thing, because there is no back window. Instead, that space, and the roof as well, is given to a 300-watt solar array that feeds the car’s 12-volt battery which is similar to the traction battery also as a lithium-ion. (Since the unique and priceless car would never be left parked outside for too long, Mercedes didn’t bother adding extra gubbins that would allow the board to charge the traction battery.)

From the rear wheels, it’s unlike anything else, perhaps other than the Lightyear Solo. When parked, the lower portion of the tail retracts into the bodywork, extending outward when the onboard vehicle brain decides it is more efficient to do so.

The rear extension can also be towed if you need to drive up a slope.
Zoom / The rear extension can also be towed if you need to drive up a slope.

Jonathan Gitlin