2022 BYD Atto 3 Extended Range review
BYD has arrived, with the first shipments of the Atto 3 selling out quickly. Is this electric SUV worthy of the hype?
BYD has arrived, the first shipments of the Atto 3 selling out before dealerships even opened their doors. So is this electric SUV worthy of the hype?
Here’s another new car brand for the local market, and another originating from China. The arrival of BYD is somewhat novel; it’s a car maker you’d never heard of and yet it has now sold hundreds of its Atto 3s before it has opened any dealerships.
Despite not yet being ANCAP tested, the Atto 3 has been awarded a five-star Vehicle Safety Risk Rating by the Government. And so both models are eligible for the current full EV Clean Car Rebate of $8625.
The Atto 3 is 4.4m long and has a single 150kW/310Nm motor powering the front axle. It rides on the firm’s ‘E platform 3.0’.
Standard features include a panoramic sunroof, powered tailgate, a 12.8-inch touchscreen, a five-inch digital instrument panel, synthetic leather trim, a 360-degree view monitor, a smart key, and a wireless phone charger. CarPlay and Android Auto integration will become available later in the year via over-the-air updates. It’s a connected car, coming with 2GB of data included each month for two years. While that doesn’t mean much at present, there will be a raft of apps soon available for download. BYD is also developing an app so your smartphone can act as the master key.
Of the drive modes, we’d leave it in Normal and be happy. Sport amps the delivery but brings with it too much wheel spin and torque steer. Eco might be handy should you be running low on charge. Normal therefore brings the balance.
It’s not slow either, the 3 hitting 100km/h in the 7.5sec they say it will, while it gets the overtake done in 4.8sec, so it’s perfectly adequate.
BYD includes a three-pin charger with the car, something they call an emergency charger, as they are encouraging buyers to use their rebate money to purchase a 7kW wallbox to enable better AC charging (the on-board charger is rated at 6.6kW). That’ll facilitate charging rates around three times faster than the emergency charger, so think overnight rather than all day. The three-pin plug took 12hr at 8A/1.2kW to bring the battery to full again from 70 per cent.
BYD NZ is developing a tow bar solution for its newbie, designed and tested here with a 750kg max rating. In reality, it’s something to attach your bike carrier to. You also get a vehicle-to-load adapter as standard (or you will do when they source one to NZ safety standards, expected in October) delivering 3.3kW of power. Handy for those who like camping, with the capacity to boil a kettle and cook your toast at the same time.
The BYD Atto 3 impressed us given the price and potential range. We reckon you’d get over the odd interior and enjoy the refinement and practicality of the Atto 3, while the spec sheet is comprehensive too.
And they reckon if you place an order now, they’ll be able to deliver it before Christmas. So we can’t really see a reason why you should strike this off the shopping list.
Model | BYD Atto 3 Extended Range |
Price | $57,990 |
Clean Car Discount | Discount – $8625 |
Motor | single, 150kW/310Nm |
Battery | 60kWh |
Range | 420km (WLTP) |
Drivetrain | single-speed auto, FWD |
Energy Use | 15.6kWh/100km |
C02 Output | 0g/km |
0-100km/h | 7.50sec |
80-120km/h | 4.82sec (135m) |
100-0km/h | 38.45m |
Stability systems | ABS, ESP, TV |
Safety | AEB, ACC, BSM, LDW, RCTA, ALK, AHB |
Luggage capacity | 440-1340L |
Tow rating | 750kg |
Service intervals | 12 months, 20,000km |
Warranty | 6yrs, 150,000km |
ANCAP rating | not yet rated |
Weight | 1750kg (claimed) |
This article was originally published on autocar.co.nz
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