RE: Alpine A290 officially previewed for first time

RE: Alpine A290 officially previewed for first time

Tuesday 20th February

Alpine A290 officially previewed for first time

Early spy pics suggested production A290 might be a bit lacklustre; a new disguise re-injects some dynamism


When we first saw the A290 back in Paris last year, the so-called ‘beta’ concept damn near knocked our socks off. Here, at last, was an electric ‘hot hatch’ which managed to look progressive and aspirational and, yes, sexy, all at the same time. Alpine said all the right things, too. Making the car handle properly was its top priority. Its second was making it look the part. Sorted, we thought. 

But then some early spy pics of the production model testing suggested that some air had been let out of its conceptual balloon. Obviously, the transition to five doors (from three on the beta) was always going to mean taking some of the edge off, but its earlier camouflage (or possibly pre-prod bodywork) was so successful that we began to wonder if the compromises required for manufacturing had taken a ruinous toll on the model’s styling. 

Seemingly alive to the shortfall in spunkiness, Alpine has now released its own snaps of the prototype testing in the Arctic Circle. Nominally, this is to illustrate that the car is moving smoothly through its final engineering phase and is currently undergoing the usual cold weather hoopla in Sweden. But it’s also about showing off the ‘brand-new Alpine camouflage’, which is notable for deliberately accentuating a number of elements the manufacturer wants us to pay attention to. 

Primary amongst them are the deeper sills and the flared wheel arches: these will likely be crucial to discerning the A290 from its Renault 5 sister, which is why Alpine is keen for them to standout even now. Ditto the four-headlight arrangement upfront, which it considers a key brand identifier, and the ‘A-Arrow’ logo on the roof. The firm says this is the ‘definitive bodywork’ and confirmed that the final version will be 3,990mm long (with a 2,530mm wheelbase) 1,820mm wide and 1,520mm tall. 

Alpine isn’t ready to show us the A290’s interior yet, although it did reveal the ‘exclusive’ sport steering wheel in Nappa leather, and highlight three functions it claims have been borrowed from the F1 cars: specifically, OV (for Overtake), RCH (Recharge) and Drive modes with one-touch access. Additionally, the release said that while testing in Sweden had focused on the winter-specific Michelin Pilot Alpin 5 tyre, the retail model would be offered with either the Pilot Sport EV (optimised for efficiency) or the performance-orientated Pilot Sport 5S. 

"Our A290, the future compact B-segment electric sports car is currently being tested in the extreme and demanding conditions of Sweden's Lapland. The target of this important stage is to confirm the direction we have taken with handling and agility, which is part of our DNA on low grip conditions,” noted Philippe Krief, Alpine’s CEO. “Our engineering team has scrutinised all the criteria, and the results bode extremely well for its launch in the coming months.” 


Author
Discussion

FaustF

Original Poster:

686 posts

155 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Well thank you Alpine for the dimensions.. can we get the weight figures also please.

snorkel sucker

2,662 posts

204 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
This looks fantastic.

If Alpine manage to sprinkle even a little bit of the magic they have endowed the A110 with then they could well give us a driver's EV.

It's been a few years now since the BMW i3s waved goodbye; that really was the benchmark for cars like the Alpine. The Mini electric is another sweet handling EV but let down by its range.




AmosMoses

4,042 posts

166 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
If they manage to bake some of the A110 magic into this it will be brilliant. Alternatively it could just be badge engineering at its finest laugh

Julian Scott

2,521 posts

25 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
FaustF said:
Well thank you Alpine for the dimensions.. can we get the weight figures also please.
I read 1500-1600kg.

Julian Scott

2,521 posts

25 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
snorkel sucker said:
The Mini electric is another sweet handling EV but let down by its range.
It is? A friends wife has just replaced her 500E with a Mini Electric, she gets 100-130miles, but it never actually drops below 100miles as she plugs it in every night.

Seems like more than enough range for a small city car? And less range, less battery weight?

garypotter

1,510 posts

151 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Is the wrap an optional extra?

snorkel sucker

2,662 posts

204 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Julian Scott said:
snorkel sucker said:
The Mini electric is another sweet handling EV but let down by its range.
It is? A friends wife has just replaced her 500E with a Mini Electric, she gets 100-130miles, but it never actually drops below 100miles as she plugs it in every night.

Seems like more than enough range for a small city car? And less range, less battery weight?
It's compromised - yes, it has a lower weight than its rivals, but that's at the expense of a smaller battery. Granted though, its pretty efficient. I'm a big Mini EV fan, but it does have less range than its rivals.

Any EV that has modest pretentions of being good to drive needs to be able to stand up to an early Sunday morning blast. If you've got a useable range of circa 100 miles then when driven with some spirit that's not going to get you very far.

It isn't much to ask for someone to come out with a hot hatch esque EV with 200 miles+ range, a modest weight and 250-300bhp. On the road, the Mini EV was every bit as quick as my Mini JCW so anything more than the 181bhp it had would be more than adequate.

dunnoreally

973 posts

109 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Am I the only one seeing a lot of Mk5 Fiesta in that?

Turbobanana

6,298 posts

202 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
PH said:
Obviously, the transition to five doors (from three on the beta) was always going to mean taking some of the edge off
Why all the PH collective hate for 5 doors? Nobody complains that a Delta integrale looks bad.

Kawasicki

13,096 posts

236 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Looks great, but I wish it was RWD!

romac

598 posts

147 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Would have quite liked to give this some stars. Not sure what algorithm decides whether we get that little bit of fun or not. Can someone at PH enlighten us?

Quite like the looks. Be very interesting to see how the R5 and A290 compare against each other, as well as their rivals.

dxg

8,222 posts

261 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Don't cartoons put X's through the eyes of characters that are dead?

I wonder what the Japanese (who love to anthropomorphise their cars) will make of that front end?

brough74

124 posts

162 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
I want to like this car and possible buy one, if it keeps to the concept on the outside i will be in. Looks like its lost the fake door scoops but i like the overtake lever if it gives you a boost for 10 seconds or so

Think about if they made a dual motor version, i would definatly be queuing up to buy one

Mannginger

9,074 posts

258 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
Yup I'm interested in this as a second car. This series of pics are definitely interesting but the important details are still clearly missing. That said, so far, so good.

SRT77

677 posts

219 months

Monday 19th February
quotequote all
The dimensions give the impression it may look a little dumpy. For example, it’s wider and taller than the Yaris GR but slightly shorter.

bcr5784

7,118 posts

146 months

Tuesday 20th February
quotequote all
SRT77 said:
The dimensions give the impression it may look a little dumpy. For example, it’s wider and taller than the Yaris GR but slightly shorter.
Too wide IMO. That's even an inch wider than the A110. The A110 has the excuse that it's very difficult to make a mid-engined car narrow -especially one with double wishbone suspension. The A290 has no such excuse.

fatsams

24 posts

174 months

Tuesday 20th February
quotequote all
With Ford and Chevrolet in the USA and some of the Japanese firm also stopping making EV’s, is another EV really required? The infrastructure for plug-ins is not there in enough quantity, the European and U.K. governments have not invested anyway near enough into the major infrastructure like power stations and thicker cables in streets, insurance companies not wanting to insure these cars due to fires and unsuraty of residual values, manufacturers should move on from EV’s. I love Alpines, by electric?

endorium

33 posts

195 months

Tuesday 20th February
quotequote all
snorkel sucker said:
This looks fantastic.

If Alpine manage to sprinkle even a little bit of the magic they have endowed the A110 with then they could well give us a driver's EV.

It's been a few years now since the BMW i3s waved goodbye; that really was the benchmark for cars like the Alpine. The Mini electric is another sweet handling EV but let down by its range.
I still find it amazing how underrated and how good the BMW i3 was. Well ahead of its time and a weight even with old tech new EV's cant get close to

Turbobanana

6,298 posts

202 months

Tuesday 20th February
quotequote all
dxg said:
Don't cartoons put X'sformerly Twitters through the eyes of characters that are dead?
Fixed that for you.

bobo

1,702 posts

279 months

Tuesday 20th February
quotequote all
i mean what is there to hide? just give me a 205 gti,

it doesn't need an overtake button on a massive overly chunky steering wheel but comes with a cigarette lighter for my Gitanes lol ....

this marketing nonsense by Renault started with the Cleo Williams a totally overrated hot hatch and one that i sold within months of getting it.

merci !