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Major car brand to overhaul popular SUV into ‘completely different car' in bid to keep up with rivals
Major car brand to overhaul popular SUV into ‘completely different car' in bid to keep up with rivals

Scottish Sun

timea day ago

  • Automotive
  • Scottish Sun

Major car brand to overhaul popular SUV into ‘completely different car' in bid to keep up with rivals

A MAJOR car brand is giving a huge makeover to one of its most popular cars and it's going to look 'completely different'. The iconic SUV is getting an overhaul as part of the beloved brand's bid to keep up with its rivals. Advertisement 3 Volkswagen are overhauling the design of one of its most iconic vehicles Credit: Alamy 3 The ID 4 will be getting a brand new look Credit: Getty Volkswagen is the manufacturer of some of the UK's favourite cars, including the ID 4 SUV. The ID 4 is the company's second electric car, after the ID 3. Now, as the model approaches its fifth anniversary, Volkswagen has decided to give the car a modern makeover. Thomas Schäfer, Volkswagen's CEO, has said that the new version of the car is 'really beautiful'. Advertisement He added: "We'll re-do the ID 4 completely inside and out. It will be a completely different car - a huge step up." The car manufacturer is hoping to make the ID 4 closely resemble the upcoming ID 1 city cars and ID 2 superminis, which have a futuristic and sleek design. Thomas said that the change is part of a bid for the brand to 'stay competitive' and for the car - which is its 'most important electric vehicle in numbers' - to look like Volkswagen's other designs. According to Autocar, the new version of the vehicle is known as the 'electric Tiguan' in Volkswagen's HQ, though it is unknown if the ID 4 will keep its name. Advertisement However, Thomas has confirmed that several major cars produced by Volkswagen will keep their names, He said: 'We've decided we're not going to throw away the traditional, successful names that have carried us for so long, that we've invested in for so long, like Golf and Tiguan. The Volkswagen ID3 GTX Performance 'Why would you let them go?' First launched in 2020, the ID 4 is the fourth best-selling electric car in Europe behind the ID 7 and ID 4. Advertisement German-owned Volkswagen is keen to become a global leader in EVs and an electric Tiguan is believed to be part of the brand's plan to remain a major player in the market. The electric Tiguan would launch in 2025 or 2026, coinciding with the release of the redesigned ID 4. However, the car manufacturer has not confirmed which aspects of the car will be changed. The American and European variants will share similar designs, while the Chinese equivalents will reflect design trends in China. Advertisement

Nissan Micra reboot proves small car isn't dead… it's a million miles better than old ones & based around superb rival
Nissan Micra reboot proves small car isn't dead… it's a million miles better than old ones & based around superb rival

The Irish Sun

time02-07-2025

  • Automotive
  • The Irish Sun

Nissan Micra reboot proves small car isn't dead… it's a million miles better than old ones & based around superb rival

NOT so long ago everyone was predicting the death of the small car. Ford Ka. Vauxhall Adam. Vauxhall Viva. Peugeot 108. Citroen C1. Renault Twingo. Skoda Citigo. Seat Mii 3 The Nissan Micra has been rebooted for the electric age Credit: David Shepherd Photographer shep@ 3 Micra is a reskinned Renault 5 using the same menu of batteries, e-motors, suspension and electronics Credit: David Shepherd Photographer shep@ All popular runabouts sent to the great scrapyard in the sky. Advertisement Manufacturers blamed cost, ever- tightening regulations adding even more cost, and the trend for Now everything is about to go full circle and I'm here for it. Renault will unveil an all-new Clio petrol hybrid shortly. read more on motors To sit alongside the gorgeous battery-powered 5. Advertisement Then the titchy Volkswagen is to update Polo with a mild hybrid petrol engine – so it'll be around for much longer. Ditto Seat and Ibiza. Then VW will roll out a family of urban EVs previewed by the ID2 and ID1 concepts. Most read in Motors Exclusive ID2 will be badged ID Polo by the time it hits showrooms next summer priced from £22k – and ID1 will become Up! in 2027, costing about £17k. Advertisement Vauxhall already flogs Corsa in both power types and we'll see the next one in a month or two. New Nissan Leaf tested - it's bigger, better and goes further Fiat has the brilliant 500 and box-fresh We recently tested Lots of small, simple starter cars for everyone. Advertisement Now we come to the red car you see here. Nissan Micra. Another household name rebooted for the electric age. Basically, Micra is a reskinned So it drives like an R5. Feels like an R5. Goes as far as an R5. Advertisement Which is fine by me. Because the R5 is a peach. So your choice is purely down to looks. Whether you prefer the retro codes of the R5 or the cheery puppy-eyed Micra. Those Micra lights 'wink' at you when you unlock the car. Advertisement That thick stripe down the waistline is what Nissan's London designers call the 'ice cream scoop'. Like dragging a spoon across the surface of untouched ice cream. Yeah, whatever. It's a million miles better than the vanilla Micras of old. 3 The Micra drives like an R5, feels like an R5 and goes as far as an R5 Credit: David Shepherd Photographer shep@ Advertisement Other observations. They've printed Mount Fuji in the centre console and boot frame, a nod to the car's Japanese heritage. But they forgot to replace the French cockerel on the windscreen. Duh. Like the R5, Micra has a twin-screen dash, Google brain, reversing camera and one simple button to switch off all the beeps and bongs the law now demands. Unlike the R5, mid-spec Micras have steering wheel paddles to adjust the levels of braking regen. Advertisement So it's actually more fun to drive. The tech wasn't ready before R5 hit the road. But it will get it soon. Nissan has also done another deal with Renault for a city car based on the upcoming Twingo. Death of the small car? No, mate. Advertisement There's lots of good stuff just around the corner. KEY FACTS: NISSAN MICRA Price: £23,000 Battery: 40kWh Power: 122hp 0-62mph: 9 secs Top speed: 93mph Range: 192 miles Out: January Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club.

VW, with Rivian help, brings forward launch of first software-defined vehicle
VW, with Rivian help, brings forward launch of first software-defined vehicle

Yahoo

time19-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

VW, with Rivian help, brings forward launch of first software-defined vehicle

Volkswagen Group has shortened by a year its timeline for offering its first software-defined vehicle. The biggest reason for that is the automaker's partnership with U.S. electric vehicle maker Rivian. The production version of VW's ID Every1 electric minicar will launch in 2027 as the group's first software-defined vehicle, VW brand CFO David Powels said on the brand's 2024 earnings call on March 13. VW Group CEO Oliver Blume said last March that the automaker's first software-defined vehicle would not arrive until 2028. At that pace, it would be two years behind Renault Group, which has said its software-defined vehicle would be ready by 2026. Volvo says its EX90 and ES90 already qualify to be called software-defined vehicles. Powels said VW Group's partnership with Rivian has helped the company bring forward the launch of advanced software functions, starting with the ID1. Last year, VW Group invested $1.3 billion into Rivian for intellectual property licenses, which included a contribution from VW brand, Powels said without providing more detail. It was part of a deal valued at nearly $6 billion. The characteristics that qualify the ID1 to be called a software-defined vehicle include 'updatable and very performant electric/electronic software architecture, [which] is something we are doing in our joint venture with Rivian,' VW brand CEO Thomas Schäfer said in response to a question from Automotive News Europe on the earnings call. The production ID1, which is expected to start at €20,000, will be the first VW Group car to get the new electronic architecture, he said. Schäfer also shared the target groups for the full-electric minicar, which include first-time car buyers, older customers and businesses such as food delivery and healthcare service providers. Sign up for the Automotive News Europe Focus on Technology weekly newsletter, looking at advancements in all aspects of the vehicle including performance, autonomous driving, batteries and more. VW will build the ID1 in Setubal, Portugal, at its Autoeuropa plant, which is one of the company's most cost-efficient factories because of the country's low labor and energy costs. Blume said the plant, which is 50 kilometers southeast of Lisbon and currently builds the VW T-Roc crossover, was also picked because of the good supplier infrastructure in Spain and Portugal, including VW's battery plant in Valencia, and its Pamplona factory that will build the ID2 full-electric small car. VW Group CFO Arno Antlitz said March 11 that achieving positive margins on the ID1 'will be difficult.' Making profitability even more challenging is that there will be no derivatives of the affordable EV to offer to VW siblings. 'We will not do a rebadge for Seat, Cupra or Skoda,' Schäfer said. 'We are differentiating now pretty clearly what model gets done by which brand so that we are not overlapping. I think by doing this we can develop more power within the individual brands.' Sign in to access your portfolio

Toyota takes cautious approach to super-cheap EVs
Toyota takes cautious approach to super-cheap EVs

Yahoo

time14-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Toyota takes cautious approach to super-cheap EVs

BRUSSELS — Toyota is not convinced that a battery-electric minicar built in Europe and priced at €20,000 or less can be profitable. Volkswagen, Renault, Dacia and Citroen have already announced European-made BEVs at that price. Most are in the minicar segment, where Toyota ranked second in 2024 with the Aygo X. Toyota is holding back on launching a low-cost BEV in Europe for now. 'Given the current cost of batteries, I am suspicious that producing in Europe could be profitable at that price point,' Toyota Europe CEO Yoshihiro Nakata said in an interview in Brussels on March 6. Toyota's rivals also have worries about the profitability of electric minicars but they are launching them anyway. Volkswagen plans to launch the ID1 battery-electric minicar priced at €20,000 in 2027 even though executives admit that it will be tough to sell the entry-level EV at a profit. VW Group CEO Oliver Blume said during the company's 2024 earnings call March 11 that it was important for VW to develop the ID1 despite its low margins because it will help to bring new customers to the brand. Sign up for the Automotive News Europe Cars & Concepts newsletter, which covers the biggest moves in Europe's product market. On the same call VW Group CFO Arno Antlitz said that achieving positive margins on the ID1 'will be difficult.' He said the ID1 the will relieve pricing pressure on VW's larger EVs such as the ID2, which is due to launch in 2025. Antlitz said the ID2 will have a 'good profit margin.' The two minicars now available in Europe for €20,000 or less are both imported from China. They are the Leapmotor T03 and Dacia Spring. But European-built alternatives are coming. A sub-€20,000 version of the Citroen C3 small hatchback, which is built in Slovakia, has been announced but is not yet available. By early 2026, Renault will start selling a new-generation electric Twingo that will be built in Novo Mesto, Slovenia, along with a similar Dacia model the following year. VW has said that the ID1 will be built at the company's plant in Setubal, Portugal and into production by 2027. A Chinese rival, BYD, will start distributing this spring in Europe a restyled and renamed variant of the Seagull electric minicar it offers in China. It will cost 'well below' €20,000, BYD said. BYD, which is building new car plants in Hungary and Turkey, has not said whether the Seagull will be built in Europe. Battery-electric cars priced at €20,000 have potential but 'convenience, affordability and usability are not quite there for these kinds of vehicles,' Toyota Europe's marketing and product development boss, Andrea Carlucci, said in an interview March 6. Carlucci said that such a car needs to offer usable range and the ability to charge relatively quickly. Toyota Europe Chief Corporate Officer Matthew Harrison said minicars would be the 'most troublesome segment' to electrify 'because accessibility and cost are critical to that buyer.' He said Toyota had no plans to abandon the minicar segment but would take a wait-and-see approach to electrification. 'Let's see where the products from competitors are priced and what they look like from a payment-per-month point of view,' Harrison said. 'We don't want to give up on the A-segment [minicars]; we didn't desert it last time around when many others did, and we are not looking to desert it any time soon,' Harrison said. In recent years Toyota's partners, Citroen and Peugeot, withdrew from a jointly owned plant in Kolin, Czech Republic, that built the Toyota Aygo, Citroen C1 and Peugeot 108 minicars, and canceled future versions of those models. Toyota is expected to add a full-hybrid version to the Aygo X this year. Consumers in Europe should be a 'bit patient' for this powertrain, Nakata said. The Aygo X is Toyota's only high-volume European model without any form of electrification. Last year, 77 percent of Toyota registrations in Western Europe were full hybrids, the company said. The Aygo X is based on a shortened Yaris small-car platform and has CO2 emissions starting at 114 g/km, while the full-hybrid Yaris starts at 96 g/km, company figures show. Minicar sales fell 22 percent in Europe last year to 543,784, according to figures from Dataforce. The Aygo X showed the biggest growth, with sales up 50 percent to 98,723. It ranked second behind the Fiat Panda (120,135) and ahead of the Hyundai i10, at 69,393 sales. Nearly all of the segment's decline came from Fiat's decision to discontinue the ICE-based 500 in midyear, resulting in 41,783 fewer sales, as well as the withdrawal of incentives in France and higher EU tariffs on the China-built Dacia Spring EBV (a loss of 38,115 sales);and 33,458 fewer sales of the Fiat 500e, BEV according to Dataforce. Peter Sigal contributed to this report

Does the £17k Volkswagen ID 1 really represent progress?
Does the £17k Volkswagen ID 1 really represent progress?

Yahoo

time05-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Does the £17k Volkswagen ID 1 really represent progress?

Range of "at least" 155 miles could mean the ID 1 can't go as far as the previous e-Up There's a lot to like about the Volkswagen ID 1. In an age when cars are forever growing bigger, here's a proper city car that's right-sized and looks great. A mainstream car brand committing to the A-segment is something to celebrate. But there's one big concern: with a promised range of 'at least' 155 miles, it's possible the ID 1 will go on sale in 2027 with basically the same range as offered by later versions of its spiritual predecessor, the e-Up. That doesn't feel like progress. To be fair, the ID 1 promises to be larger, more practical, more powerful and around £3000 cheaper than a new e-Up would have set you back in 2023 (and the e-Up benefitted from a government grant). Those are hard-won gains, and they haven't been easy. Still, it's a stark illustration of how making affordable electric cars is a huge challenge. EV batteries are slowly – glacially – getting cheaper, but they remain by far the most expensive part of a new EV. Volkswagen was determined to hit its €20,000 (£17,000) target for the ID 1, and the best way to do that is to right-size the battery for its intended urban use case. Trouble is, that requires buyers to accept a potentially unpalatable compromise. A range of 155 miles might be fine for the everyday, but what about those occasional weekend trips away? History suggests buyers are unlikely to compromise with their main or only car. It's concerning that, like the Renault Zoe, Nissan Leaf and e-Up in the early days of mass-market EVs a decade or so back, the likes of the ID 1 and Dacia Spring could find most success as budget second cars – a daily runaround that allows you to keep your bigger, posher car for the weekend. Which is great, but that means instead of widening access to electric mobility, the new wave of cheap EV is really providing further benefit to more affluent buyers who can afford two cars. Single-car owners on a budget who don't want to compromise will stick with petrol. None of that is Volkswagen's fault: it can produce cheaper EVs, but it can't control who buys them. And in an age when so many rivals have given up on smaller, more affordable cars, credit to it for persisting in a category that is no longer a huge profit driver. It's absolutely doing the right thing. But this is a reminder that there's a long way to go to making truly usable everyday EVs that are genuinely affordable – and that, at present, even the drive towards affordable EVs risks benefitting those who are better off. ]]>

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