This great Fully Charged video is still relevant - even after 3 years. Not perhaps for the Mini content (since we now have the pure Mini E available) - but still a good review for the i3/i3S. It’s now 2022, and the i3 ceases production in just 5 months after nearly 10 years and 250,000 cars - and yet, the i3 design and capabilities are still competitive. It’s a revelation when you actually drive an i3/i3S - well… it’s best to just do it - to see for yourself what the fuss is all about. It is certainly a “Marmite” car that divides opinion like no other. You either love it or hate it… but like most things, don’t knock it until you’ve really tried it. I’ve always been a complete petrolhead - having raced motorcycles for about 10 seasons and owned lots of very special ICE cars since the 1980’s. I NEVER EVER thought I’d be an early adopter of an electric car, but the i3 changed all that when I was loaned an i3S during a service of my BMW M5. I was impressed. Yes, really. Initially, soon afterwards we had a short term lease of a secondhand 94Ah i3 (no Rex) which demonstrated that electric power alone in the i3 was fast, fun to drive and in the real world actually a very nice place to be. It arrived as a “second” car, but strangely it soon appeared to become the car everyone took first… including me! I wouldn’t have thought that before we got one. Yes, range in a 94Ah was compromised to around 120 miles on a very good day, but you soon get used to the mindset of ABC (always be charging) and the feathering of the accelerator to give true one-pedal driving which boosts the range a fair bit. That instant torque, the rear wheel drive and spacious comfortable cabin won us all over - It truly is very, very addictive. After around 9 months, we upgraded to actually buying another low milage secondhand i3 with the 120Ah (42kWh) battery which we have now had for two years. Always pre-conditioned when possible, the real world range in the 120Ah version now varies from 110 miles on a very cold winters day driving on motorways (and having a heavy foot) to c.180 miles in the summer when having fun on B roads out in the countryside where we live. We do have the luxury of a 7.2kW charger at home and use mostly cheap rate early morning electricity from the grid, or solar PV (mostly spring to autumn) to charge. It’s very cheap to run that way, and easy. We have never had range anxiety despite it being a BEV, and even with a few quite regular 300+mile trips to visit elderly relatives. On range, it’s important to remember that generally, few people travel over the range of an i3 each day. Plug it in at night, and it’s full again (and also nicely warm/cool) by morning… It’s just so easy to live with. Any further than the indicated range - then we usually stop at about 25-30% left, have a coffee and a short rapid charge (say after 110 miles of driving). That will usually see you to your destination. It’s a very civilised way of travelling. (Note: Our favourite fast chargers are InstaVolt - because they just work. 35 minutes adds about 115 miles.) So after nearly 3 years of i3 ownership - we are convinced that the i3 was ahead of its time - and arguably it still is a game changer and a future classic. I’ve lived with the i3 now, and had the daily experience - good bits and bad bits. Having driven a lot of the new electric cars available (Mini E, Id.3, Kona, Leaf, e-Tron, iX3 and even a Tesla S to name a few) I find this hard to say - but I am still completely sold on the i3. A few cars give pause for thought - Seat Cupra Born as an example (a better looking ID3 really) but the i3 still wins for me. It’s hard to say why exactly, but although the range could be better (do you really need it?) I think the driving and ownership experience is still very hard to beat. Having heard the i3 was ceasing production earlier than the original 2024 date - it has forced this driver to evaluate now - exactly what I want for the next few years… That has led to an order for one of the last BMW i3S’s due for delivery later this year. The fossil fuelled cars have now all gone (apart from a vintage Land Rover Series IIA - in my family from new) and so the future is now doubly i3 based in this household. i3 good bits: Really good fun to drive Cheap to run Great cabin Versatile space for up to 4 people or 2+ lots of gear. Great infotainment Still has proper buttons Plastic panels, aluminium chassis and CFP tub means little to corrode That door arrangement works really well - except when side/side parking. i3 poor bits (seen in 2022) Less range than some rivals Slow AC charging - only 11kW DC charging limited to 50kW (though really fast chargers are rate at present anyway) “Sporty” ride - some don’t like it firm.. If always parking side to side - the doors can be a pain Some standard elements need “coding” to remove the annoyance factor. (Such as everything switches off when you get out to open or close a gate…)
I have driven an I3 since 2014. The car still makes me smile REALLY HARD every time I get into it. Such a beautiful mind blowing design, materials, engineering. Bravo BMW!
Idk I was some time in one and I really disliked the small display and the bad grey recycled plastic in the upper side of the front doors and where the interior meets the windshield.
I’ve had my BMW i3 for nearly a year and I love it more now than when I first bought it, once you have driven one it is hard to give it up. Every time I sit in the drivers seat it I feel like I’ve time travelled to the future. I’m so glad it’s been described in this video as a future classic car; I urge anyone who doubts this statement to experience an i3 for weekend test drive to see for themselves why it’s completely unique from driving anything else.
@Gabriel Cabana Us guys in the UK are still waiting a long time to even see a Model 3 :( Until then, the i3 is a fantastic car and one we can buy today.
@Gabriel Cabana I should hope so, it's taking long enough :) To be honest, I've driven a Model S and it's nice but way too big. I also don't need any more speed, the i3 offers plenty.
BMW just anounced bigger battery packs for the i3 from november on. +30% capacity with 42kwh. Price and weight stays the same. Range is now about +30% around 300km+!
A pitty they do not seem to do a upgrade program :( ... well i was not keen on upgrading 50% capacity for almost 10000€ but i was really considering upgrading if the range doubled, which it now has but seems i'm out of luck :(. Can i order it as a repair part ;)?
Thats awesome... I dont really fancy an EV with less then 300 km of range as a primary car, as a secondary, the i3S in its current form would be plenty good enough. I see the i3's fairly often around where I live, probably because there is one or two owners here xD
I think the upgrade was in 2018... Nonetheless, they've improved upon a modern-day classic! The biggest compliment you can give this car is that; motoring journalists and reviews have run out of superlatives!
You nailed it Jonny! The i3 will be a design icon in years to come and like all good designs will be controversial to many and have their lovers and haters. Taste is a funny thing. Outside of the design, BMW delivered on truly the most eco-friendly build from the ground up with it's materials, production chain and well-to-wheel environmental standards. I now live in the US and the lease rates for i3's have been so great in recent years that I wish more people could experience the car. I'm 6'5 and it's one of the roomiest vehicles I've ever had for driving position. With a set of Nokians on the wheels its also a really fun drive in the winter. My wife hated the rear doors though. With our baby in a rear facing car seat it was quite the pain to get them in or out if you got boxed in a parking space.
Our family rented the basic i3 1st generation for a month last year. WOW! Even my teenage son changed his mind about the design, from negative to positive. My wife fell in love (with the car) and I am still crying, since I had to deliver it back.
Johnny’s presentation style is brilliant. It is conversational and candid. Perfect for the channel. Also great infographics, they are great for product reviews, but it is a shame there weren’t any on the model 3 vid. Great video.
I am really excited by this channel - I like Robert and Jonny a lot and I love the focus of the channel. I recently went self employed and my other half would scalp me if i did it right now, but as soon as I can I will be supporting this content on Patreon!
I sold my mini copper (petrol) for i3 because I was sick of waiting for the long promised mini electric (still waiting!). Anyone - I don't regret. Lovin it!
I'm glad Smith calls out the Mini Clumpman's looks. I've driven a couple on holiday and always felt I should be wearing a blue pointy hat with a bell on #noddy
Been driving i3's since April of 2015, loved the concept, followed the concept through to production. Leased a REx, then purchased a CPO BEV, all options for $17,600; it boggles my mind how cheap the i3 can be had used. Best bang for the buck in my bias opinion. Yesterday BMW announced another battery bump and my understanding is it only weighs 4lbs more. If true, that is incredible!
The video confirms my impression of the i3s. What a great driving experience. I'll order one because the charging infrastructure is good enough for me now and the design has become cooler.
Thanks for the Video - i3s for me thanks - most likely with the REX. The reason why these two cars are so different is that they were not made by the same teams. The i3 was developed at the BMW headquarters in Munich by a separate 200 Employees department working solely on the i3. All the research that was made for the interior has also been taken to German universities on environmental design and engineering studies. The i3´s materials are more environmentally friendly than any other EV currently on the market - also the i3 is the most sold EV in Germany. I have only driven an i3 once and was hugely and positively surprised by its immediacy and acceleration from about 15-100 Km/h - As a city commuter, it is perfect. And I would also like to see the i8 as a pure EV - the design would be perfect for it.
The MINI is a marmite car, I have one & I think it looks cute & chunky, I've never had a car that people actually walk up and tell me they like my car before, I assume there are an equal number of people who think it's awful but just aren't mentioning it. It works for me & I'm averaging over 300 MPG, though I have seen extremes of 706 MPG & 23.9 MPG. It's surprisingly quick too one magazine hit 60 in 5.8 which is quicker than the JCW though MINI will not tell you this.
As usual top notch review and presentation Jonny - good to see MK especially Willen :) - when you were driving the i3 the mini looked like it wanted to overtake all the time behind you ! Good to Booby making a cameo in reverse parking camera . Unusually some of the fixed camera work was a bit shaky and out of focus in the i3 . I think if you going to buy a new £30k PHEV the Outlander is hard to beat albeit larger than the odd looking countryman. Be good to see the review of the 3 door EV Mini when it finally comes out .
I think it's fair to say until you have driven a car like the i3 you'll struggle to get it. I had one for a day and fell for it within a mile of driving. You instantly engage with the car and it's engineering. So good in fact I have one coming as a company car in 3 weeks. Yes the design is "marmite" but once you drive and live with it, as I said, you get it.
Hello, I have a question, well two. - The BMW i3 has a combustion motor option called range extender. Does that mean the BMW i3 is a hybrid and not a pure EV? - Also if I use the BMW i3 with very little use of the combustion engine range extender function, (like lets say just once per month or less) what happens to the combustion engine? Will there be damage and require expensive repair after long periods of not use?
I thought that the MINI Cooper S has a 4 cylinder 2 litre engine. It is the standard Cooper that has the 1.5 litre 3 pot. Is it different on the PHEV? Does it share the same format powertrain as the i8 which has the smaller ICE?
My wife drives a Countryman PHEV and it's a great car. Looks excellent in British Racing Green with the white roof. A much better family car than the Golf GTE given that you can actually fit something in the boot. The kids love it, my wife loves it, I am happy to drive it. Plus, unlike the wondrous original Mini, it's not made of rust and we aren't the crumple zone, which is always a bonus. Still rather have it full EV, but I have my Ioniq for that.
Shane Rickwood they stopped writing it like that, it’s now stylised MINI and I reckon they did that just to reduce the absurdity of having a Mini larger than some old SUVs.
Agreed. People are being precious about the Mini's size. You can still get a three door Cooper which is relatively tiny. Hell, look at how the Nissan Leaf has blown out in size.
New i3 with extra range now going in production in November and the electric Mini is expected sometime next year. next years is looking great for this segment.
Another fantastic video from Smith. Don’t know about other people but he always reviews cars how I would and describes cars how I would too! I3 is a fantastic bit of kit, expensive but a great piece of engineering and shows how EVs can be built when carefully thought out. And now with an even better range, nearly 200 miles on a charge. That’s very useable.
I wanna convert a 280z Datsun, but from what I've seen the range goes up to only 60 miles... I'm not that well versed in how this works given that I've only researched for about 2 days but is it possible to increase the range to say 150-200 miles? Would I just need a bigger battery? can I essentially just use a Tesla model 3 battery? Some tips and help would be greatly appreciated :-))
Is the range extender still noisy? As a used car or 2nd car it's good. What's the depreciation like? It's never going to be a great drivers car but it's quirky
Definitely a future classic! 10 years on and it still looks amazing and once you driven one your realise why! Best car I have ever bought! Just about to upgrade to i3s 120AH! Can't wait!
Good review Jonny! Do you know what the i3 reminds me of? In the "cheeky and fun" way that it drives? Yup, an original BL Mini! Somehow, more than the sum of its parts with a genuine character that makes you smile when you drive it. To drive it is to love it ime. Also ime, the BeV handles significantly better than the ReX, with noticeably better roll on performance and less weight in the back. I commute through MK (where this piece was filmed) and the aggressive regen in my i3 means you can actually maintain a very decent pace on the grid roads (roundabout -> 200m -> roundabout ) without using the friction brakes, and hence still maintaining an overall low consumption.
The i3S would be my choice if I could just have any EV. Especially now with the latest battery upgrade they just announced. It has the range, it’s a great size for me, it’s fun to drive and looks good. The Mini Countryman on the other hand I’m not a fan of and I do think it damages the brand. The Clubman at least looks like a Mini, even if it is too big and has impractical twin doors at the back. The new Mini EV does look good though so I hope it’s a big success.
I loved the Hitchcock-like appearance of Llewellyn in the rear view parking video! Very good. Others have said it here, but it’s worth repeating. BMW have forgotten about the essence of the Mini. I imagine Izzy Issigonis is spinning in his grave. I used to own an original and it was great fun. They could do so much with a built-from-the-ground-up full-EV Mini.
Thanks! I am trying to decide between these two cars right now! The Mini PHEV is available on Motability the BMW I3 is not :( much prefer the I3 but Motability scheme is so much easier to go with....
I believe that the BMW equivalent of the Mini PHEV is the 225xe - very similar specs. Same 1.5l turbo engine and 88Kw motor I believe (both total 165Kw power output and 0-100 in 6.7s). I have the 225xe as it's slightly bigger and found it more practical for families.
I must admit when I come to change my 2014 leaf the i3 is very tempting. I love the design and I wish more car manufacturers would stick there neck out with radical designs. As for the MINI it's a car that people who don't have a real interest in cars buy in my opinion.
The i3 looks to the future, the mini looks to the past. I love the engineering of the i3 - aluminium frame, CFRP tub with plastic body panels makes a light car that will not rust or suffer parking dents - the plastic just bounces back! For front passengers, the experience is spacious, with a large panoramic view through that windscreen. And the real treat is 'fuel' costs - I charge over night on cheap rate, I costs me £1.30 to do about 140 miles.
HOW have they not made a pure electric Mini Cooper-E (CoopEr?) A good electric MINI would really expand the EV market - people just love the classic mini look, and it's generally used as a city/2nd car runabout anyway
Couldn't agree with you more, Jonny. The Countryman bastardises what was an iconic and rather charming retro Mini design. It's for people who can't live with a small car, have no taste for design and somehow think the Mini name makes them seem cool and young at heart. It doesn't. Middle aged and overweight, more like.
However the original Mini was tiny, noisy, uncomfortable, impractical, dangerous, had rubbish heating and rubbish ancient engines!! Just for starters......
@@andymccabe6712 I agree with you re the original Mini, but I was comparing the Countryman to BMW's rebirthed two-door Mini as a modern classic with loads of retro styling cues combined with up to date safety, convenience and comfort features. It was an iconic, cuddly and charming car, with great handling thrown in - but was never going to be practical as family transport. To expand its target market, BMW has bastardised the design to breaking point. I can understand why - while wishing they hadn't. What I can't understand is why anyone with good taste would want to buy one of these bloated, ugly beasts.
Entitled millennials who think the world revolves around them make me puke. Wanting a car that can fit a family does not make one overweight. No one took the impractical smaller Mini away from you. Why does it upset you that they added a larger model?
Right now, around 140 miles. If you wait till the new one comes out in November, maybe 180 or so, or 200 with a touch of hypermiling. EDIT NOTE TO SELF: Don't do km to mile conversions in your head, use a calculator. Sory, these figures were a little optimstic. That should be right now anout 100 miles, 140 or so on the next model.
A brilliant comparative test Jonny I agree with you, never been a fan of this design of BMW's mini, but i do like there i series. But my heart is with Jaguar and the future is going to be fascinating.
Nice video again, But As u present it, these are siblings, I think you mixed something up, at least in sweden the small sporty brother is BMW225XE, and the bigger brother with some Hull are Mini Countryman Phev. 225XE Mini and Countryman Phev share “all” Phev tech, as the I3 has at least one different parent, isn’t that right?