Polestar 2 Polestar 2


The Polestar 2 is a battery electric 5-door liftback marketed by Polestar, an affiliate of Geely Holding and Volvo Cars. Based on the CMA platform, production began in March 2020 at the Luqiao CMA Super Factory in Luqiao, Zhejiang, China.
I think the fix is pretty simple, it needs the Volvo grill. See how much better it looks!

osatw8q8k5k21.webp

It's funny to read a post I wrote that's not even a year old and I how much I disagree with it. I agree that a Volvo front looks better, but I am really digging it as is. And yes, an electric station wagon sounds appealing.
 
You may joke but I can see the value in this. My sister is a vegan for animal cruelty and exploitation reasons, and she's based 2 car purchases on who can sell her a car without a leather steering wheel cover. The struggle is real!
Of course there is a value in this, Volvo's marketing people are not stupid, they know very well how to use the vegan wave that is to trendy now for all that it is worth.
 
Of course there is a value in this, Volvo's marketing people are not stupid, they know very well how to use the vegan wave that is to trendy now for all that it is worth.

Volvo aren't stupid you can also get a Polestar 2 with full leather interior, which would be my choice. The animals are going to die anyway so every part should be used.
 
The animals are going to die anyway so every part should be used.

But how they live and die do matter? I could post videos of dogs being bludgeoned and skinned alive for leather (or you can google it). You are a dog owner, I believe? I am sure some part of you revile the idea of a dog/animal suffering like that?

I am not a vegan, I am far from it, so I am not climbing on any high horse. But I am also not in denial of the cruelty of factory farming.
 
But how they live and die do matter? I could post videos of dogs being bludgeoned and skinned alive for leather (or you can google it). You are a dog owner, I believe? I am sure some part of you revile the idea of a dog/animal suffering like that?

I am not a vegan, I am far from it, so I am not climbing on any high horse. But I am also not in denial of t...

Animal cruelty is a problem, but so long as the animals I eat are treated ethically I'm all good. As for dog if people want to eat dog I'm not going to stop them, if the animals are treated properly it shouldn't be any different than breeding and butchering a cow. When we do use an animal we should use whole animal, nose to tail. We also now know than plants are sentient and can feel, so where does that leave us? We have to eat.
 
Animal cruelty is a problem, but so long as the animals I eat are treated ethically I'm all good.
But do you know for a fact it is? I don't know how things are where you are, but in US, animal abuse and cruelty is endemic with factory farming, which is least surprising given profit motive runs counter to an animal's well being before it is butchered and rules and regulations are lax. What is even worse is, in many states, it is even illegal to report animal abuse happening in factory farms.
 
Norway is not the US, we don’t have factory farms and corporations running the meat industry, most farms in Norway would be considered large if they had 100 head of cattle. We don’t import meat from the US either, almost everything is domestic, apart from some South American beef and lamb from New Zealand.
 
Now, the E market is still immature and virtually nobody really knows what exactly will happen. You're right, the market is growing rapidly BUT still we're talking about rather small absolute numbers. AND: E customers are a rather special breed.

Thought you would find this interesting :)

“It’s not like the combustion engine is going to be a growing business,”
- CEO of Volvo, Hakan Samuelsson

31759263-23D6-4150-B6E0-CA0120BEFEE5.webp
 
Polestar 2 Performance Pack adds top-shelf chassis upgrades

Polestar 2 electric car need not fret. Volvo's performance spinoff on Tuesday announced a Performance Pack for the battery-electric sport sedan that will be available from launch.

The pack doesn't add any extra power, though we're sure few will be complaining with the stock output of 408 horsepower and 487 pound-feet. Rather, it dials up the chassis and also adds some extras in the cabin.

Included in the pack are Ohlins adjustable dampers, 20-inch forged alloys, and Brembo brakes with 4-piston calipers up front. The pack also includes gold accents for the seatbelts and tire valve caps.

Joakim Rydholm, Polestar's head of chassis development, said the pack was developed to ensure the Polestar 2 has an ideal mix of comfort and performance, something he referred to as the “golden ride.”
polestar-2_100693298_l.webp

Polestar 2
Pricing for the pack in the United States will be announced at a later date, but we've previously heard it will run about $5,000. Polestar has already confirmed that the Polestar 2 will start at $45,000, though the first versions to arrive will be a special Launch Edition priced at $63,000.

Just one powertrain configuration has been announced. It consists of a 78-kilowatt-hour lithium-ion battery and a motor at each axle. The 0-60 mph time should be less than 5.0 seconds and the EPA-rated range is expected to be about 275 miles.

Exact timing for the U.S. is yet to be announced but we know the Polestar 2 starts production in early 2020, at a Volvo plant in Luqiao, China. It will be followed around 2022 by a Polestar 3 SUV. The Polestar 1 is already in production at Polestar's own plant in Chengdu, China.

Anyone interested in the Polestar 2 can reserve the car with a fully refundable deposit. Polestar is planning a fully digital sales model for most markets, though in the U.S. the brand will have franchised dealers whose locations will be in major urban centers.

HIGH-RES GALLERY: Polestar 2
polestar-2_100719233.webp

polestar-2_100719232.webp

polestar-2_100719231.webp

polestar-2_100719234.webp

polestar-2_100719235.webp

polestar-2_100719236.webp


Polestar 2 Performance Pack adds top-shelf chassis upgrades
 
Polestar 2 EV production begins, despite COVID-19 spread - Roadshow

Polestar 2 EV production begins, despite COVID-19 spread
Deliveries will first start in Europe, then China and finally, the US.

production coming to a halt in Europe and North America, but on the flip side of things, Polestar is moving full speed ahead to start Polestar 2 production -- its direct Tesla Model 3 rival.

Polestar revealed on Tuesday that production began this week at its factory in Luqiao, settled in China's eastern Zhejiang province. There, the Polestar 2 shares an assembly line with the Volvo XC40. If you're wondering about the China connection, Chinese automaker Geely owns both brands.

Ahead of the formal announcement, Polestar sent an email to fans and future owners globally on Monday, which noted Volvo Group's electric car division took the coronavirus outbreak very seriously. Thanks to stringent policies, its Chinese operations were not affected. In fact, Polestar touted zero cases of COVID-19, the disease the coronavirus causes, in its Chinese teams. Temperature screenings, thorough disinfecting processes and masks for every worker were just a few of Polestar's strategies.

polestar2promo2.webp


And the worked. Polestar CEO Thomas Ingenlath commended the workforce and thanked the teams for securing the supply chain needed to begin production amid so much disruption around the globe.

Soon-to-be owners are in for quite a car, from our calculations. The range-topping Polestar 2 should pack an estimated 275 miles, 408 horsepower and 487 pound-feet of torque and an Android-powered infotainment system with a focus on simplicity. A 78 kilowatt-hour battery provides juice for the dual e-motor setup.

For now, the sole 2 headed to production will be the Launch Edition model, which rings in at $63,000 before any tax credits. After the first year of production, Polestar plans to roll out a $55,000 model and then a single-motor variant with a less expensive starting price that's to be determined. Europe will have first dibs on deliveries, which should start in the summer. Polestar will then start deliveries in China before North America sees its first Polestar 2 hit the road.
 
Polestar 2 Matches Electric Performance With High Levels Of Safety

Polestar: “Safety is of paramount importance for Polestar.”
Polestar is following the Volvo brand in terms of applying a high level of safety to its cars. The company boasts that several new safety features will be available right from the start in the launch edition of Polestar 2.

One of the first things that caught our attention is the SPOC block (Severe Partial Offset Crash) deflector:

"‘SPOC block’ (Severe Partial Offset Crash) – a deflective solid aluminium block housed on the bottom edge of the front firewall on either side of the car, designed to minimise intrusion of the wheel and other objects into the cabin and towards the battery pack during partially offset frontal collisions. Increasing protection in the absence of an internal combustion engine, Polestar 2 also features a new Front Lower Load Path (FLLP) that protects occupants and the battery pack from more direct frontal impacts, for example with a pole."

The battery pack, fully housed within the floor structure, is enclosed in an aluminum case to protect the battery structure as well as provide high rigidity.

The Polestar 2 will be equipped with an all-new acoustic warning system - Acoustic Vehicle Alert System (AVAS) - unique to Polestar brand: "recognizable, non-intrusive and natural-sounding", but not like "a robot or symphonic spaceship".

Another first for Polestar (and Volvo) are all-new front-inner-side airbags:


"These new airbags, which are standard fitment in all markets, add an extra layer of protection for the inner limbs of the front occupants who are now individually protected from both sides, as well as from the front."

Finally, a full suite of driver assistance and crash avoidance features will be default in the launch edition of the Polestar 2.

"Polestar 2 debuts a new generation of Advanced Driver Assistance System (ADAS) technology, which will make its way into other products from the Volvo Car Group as well. Pilot Assist is an advanced driver assistance system which provides acceleration, braking and steering assistance up to 130 km/h.

In its latest guise, Pilot Assist features location-based enhancements which adjust the amount of assistance in acceleration based on the car’s actual position.

Detection systems for other vehicles in front, behind and in the blind spots of the car, as well as pedestrians and cyclists ahead of the car, are all coupled to steering assistance and autonomous emergency braking (AEB) to help ensure that interactions between other road users and Polestar 2 are kept as safe as possible at all times."

Gallery: Polestar 2 (2019)

40 Photos
polestar-2-2019.webp
polestar-2-2019.webp
polestar-2-2019.webp

Polestar 2 specs:

  • 470 km (292 miles) of WLTP range
  • 78 kWh battery (324 pouch cells, 27 modules, liquid-cooled)
  • 0-100 km/h (62 mph) in 4.7 seconds
  • dual motor all-wheel drive
  • system output: 300 kW (408 hp) and 660 Nm of torque (one 150 kW and 330 Nm electric motor per axle)
  • 150 kW fast charging capability
  • based on Compact Modular Architecture (CMA) platform
* in China battery capacity will be 72 kWh
 

Attachments

Very detailed review with English subtitles

To view this content we will need your consent to set third party cookies.
For more detailed information, see our cookies page.
 
Polestar 2 review: the best EV there is right now


We have a new favourite electric car, and it's the second offering from Volvo's performance sibling

group.jpg

By JEREMY WHITE

Saturday 11 July 2020
PROS
Superb design, build quality and performance; Google designed media system; elegant simplicity
CONS
Less range than Tesla Model 3; Google Assistant limitations; no autonomous capability
PRICE
From £49,900

9 / 10
hero-polestar_2_shanghai_006.jpg


You may recall how much we liked last year's Polestar 1, a hybrid with blistering pace and sublime styling that combined to make it the most striking plug-in GT there was. The one shame was Polestar limited the production run to just 1,500. Why? It was only ever intended as a stop-gap to show the company's working as it prepared to release this, the Polestar 2 – the brand's first full electric car.

And quite the car it is. For those who want the TL;DR version: if the excellent Polestar 1 was the quickie project, intended to iron out kinks and concentrate minds on problems to solve as well as signify publicly a direction for the company, it should not be hard to imagine, with its additional years of development, just how good the Polestar 2 is.

Model 3.

Well, considering the impact of the Polestar 1, the announcement of the coming Polestar 3 SUV and Precept as well as the fact that the company (along with Volvo) is owned by the Chinese Geely Auto Group, which also has Lotus and Lynk & Co in its roster of brands, you can cross "establish as a major player" off the list. As for beating the Tesla Model 3? Yes it does. Just.


polestar2_performance_hde_magnesium_014jpg.jpg


With prices starting at £49,900, the Polestar 2 costs £7,400 more than the Model 3 at base level. But, as you know, how you choose to configure and spec these cars can quickly raise those figures. A 78kWh battery pack and electric motors on the front and rear axle give the car more than 400bhp split equally between front and rear. This means 0-62mph in 4.7 seconds and a top speed of 127mph (shunning Volvo’s 112mph limit).


polestar2_performance_hde_magnesium_011jpg.jpg


Mini Electric, the best compliment that can be said of this car is that, if you ignore the regen braking, very quickly you forget you are driving an EV. This is an extremely well developed car that has the kind of quality of finish that Tesla has been aiming for but missing, and from the exterior design to the driving experience to the interior there is very little to disappoint.

This fact alone should persuade those thinking of plumping for the Model 3 to change direction. Yes, the Long Range Model 3 is supposedly good for 50 miles more compared to the equivalent "Performance Pack" Polestar 2 (good for up to 292 miles from a full charge), but you will have to run the build-quality gauntlet. With the Polestar, you won't.

Then there is the exterior design. Put the Model 3 next to the Polestar 2 and there is a clear winner. When my test drive car arrived, my neighbours left their house (in lockdown) to come and admire the bodywork. This is a beautifully designed 5-door 'fastback', with the killer touch being the Cylon-like rear brake-light swoosh when it is woken. Polestar also appears to know what to do with a front grille, unlike Tesla.

polestar2_performance_hdc_thunder_005jpg.jpg



Things improve further on the inside. You get minimalist Scandinavian design – lots of black – and no superfluous flourishes. Everything has a place and a job. Even the driver's screen flips to an info display showing charge levels and times in large fonts and colours specifically designed to be easily seen through the side window from the outside in case you want to check on things as the car is plugged in.

Now we get to the Polestar 2's much-anticipated, completely Google, control and media system. This is the first of its kind, shunning the usual mess of in-house car company-designed infotainment systems with Apple CarPlay or Android Auto shoehorned in, in favour of actually giving what drivers have wanted for years: an extension of their phones.

What you get is a pimped Google tablet that can be configured to show four apps at once in tile format with limited control for each in this view. Tap into the app itself for more control. It requires virtually no instruction to navigate, unlike so many other car systems, and is instantly familiar to anyone who has used a tablet. And then you have Google Assistant, too.

You can do a lot with just your voice in this car. Start Spotify, set a nav destination, send messages, change cabin temperature, etc. In fact, you might want to think of the Polestar 2 as a giant, better-looking Google Home speaker that just happens to have break-neck acceleration and is able to drive just shy of 300 miles before needing plugging in again.

stefanisaksson-200610-2440_v001jpg.jpg



This is the standard Google Assistant, though, with all its frills and foibles. You will be misunderstood more than occasionally. You will be told more often than you should that it cannot help with whatever you are asking for. It will do something completely random from time to time.

The other frustrating matter is that you can do some things by voice in the Polestar 2 but not others, and some things only part of the way. For example, you can turn on the heated seats by vocal command, but not raise or lower the heat settings. For that you have to use the touchscreen. You can ask for a radio station by voice if using TuneIn, but ask for a DAB station and Google falls over. There are numerous ways to open the boot, but you cannot tell the car to open it.

If you are going to make such a feature of voice control, I'd like it to be comprehensive, not selective. And we're not asking for the Moon here. A decision has been taken somewhere to not let Google raise or lower the seat heat setting. It is perfectly possible for it to do so. Likewise with the DAB radio.

1586953313-batteryenginespreviewpng.jpg

Two electric motors are fitted – one on each axle - between the battery assembly. Each motor produces 204hp and 330Nm, for a total of 408hp and 660Nm

Aloka Muddukrishna, Polestar's head of the Google UX system, says the system is not finished yet. More is coming, including the ability to download and use nav apps of your choice such as Waze – it’s an easy win over other car companies – and that Polestar will be relying on customer feedback to work out which elements to add to the system via download updates. Such updates will very likely include extensions for the battery range, too, as Polestar gets more data on real-world usage.


Muddukrishna also confirms the maps tile, which has limited functions on the home screen, will become dynamic, a mini sat nav in effect, so you can have instant access to the other favourite apps as well as not having to display the full map view in the driver's screen. It is working on integrating the streaming apps, too, so you can watch film and TV while you wait for battery charging at motorway services or wherever. These continual tweaks will be most welcome, and should, if done right, continue to improve the Polestar experience and highlight the folly and missed opportunity of the kind of media system you find in virtually all other cars right now.


The only obvious omission is level three autonomy giving the ability of the Polestar 2 to drive itself on the motorway. For a car that is trying so hard to encourage us into the next era of motoring it seems a strange ability to leave out. Price is undoubtedly a factor, but also CEO Thomas Ingenlath believes people just aren't ready for the technology, saying that many people still don't know what adaptive cruise control is. It's neat reasoning, but I disagree. Make a level three system intuitive and reliable and people will flock to use it. Who would want to drive motorway miles if they didn't have to?

But these minor gripes aside, what Polestar has created is remarkable. The 2 is beautifully designed, well built and, crucially, well conceived. You can tell the effort that has gone into creating this car. No corners cut, a clear vision guiding purpose. Polestar is even planning a two-wheel drive version, as well as one with a smaller battery, which will bring the cost of this EV down even further (the same tactic Tesla used with the Model 3).

This is what happens when those with expertise and a long history of car manufacture catch up with Elon. Tesla had better take note. It has been overtaken. And all the people who have been brave enough to buy the Polestar 2 without even having a test drive – and when I say "all" I mean it as there have been no public drives for customers who have parted with money – they will not be disappointed. This is what EVs should be like. Now we just need to fix the charging system.


Jeremy White is WIRED's executive editor. He tweets from @jeremywired

 
Polestar really appears to be on the move. An exciting brand that will be closely watched. Having designer Thomas Ingenlath as CEO is a major asset and I'm very eager to see what the brand has in store over the course of the next few years.
 
Polestar really appears to be on the move. An exciting bran...
I agree, it's also exciting to have something new in the electric market, I can imagine this being very popular with european countries that have previously favoured Tesla.

I like Tesla, however I had an Uber the other day that was a model 3, the quality was just really lacking.... There is definitely a market for something more solid. I think Polestar could be that.
 

Volvo

Volvo Cars is a Swedish multinational manufacturer of luxury vehicles. Founded in 1927, Volvo is headquartered in Torslanda, Gothenburg, Sweden. The company has been owned by the Chinese multinational automotive company Geely since 2010. Volvo also produces electric vehicles under the Polestar brand.
Official websites: Volvo, Polestar

Thread statistics

Created
DjordjeC63,
Last reply from
tristatez28lt1,
Replies
165
Views
14,666

Trending content


Back
Top