RE: New Dacia Spring revealed ahead of UK launch
RE: New Dacia Spring revealed ahead of UK launch
Thursday 22nd February 2024

New Dacia Spring revealed ahead of UK launch

Dacia's electric car is coming to the UK this year. But not before it's received a timely update...


There’s a common refrain when it comes to new EVs. A lot of new cars, in fact. Essentially it’s hard to argue that they all seem way too heavy, much too fast and stupidly expensive. Plenty of people need affordable, simple, dependable new cars, and there doesn’t seem to be an awful lot of them. Dacia to the rescue, then, as this is the updated Spring: a sub-1,000kg electric car that’s already the cheapest new EV in Europe and is set (we hope) to claim the same accolade in the UK. Prices will follow in March, though there’s plenty to be encouraged by already for those weary of mega, mammoth electric cars. 

When more than two tonnes is the going rate for anything battery-powered, the Spring’s 984kg kerbweight is extremely impressive. Of course, it won’t be as plush or as rangey as the super duper stuff, but that’s not the point - it’s a city runaround. And to weigh less than a VW Up doing so is laudable. That’s for the top-of-the-range Extreme model, too, crammed with active safety tech, and is actually six kilos heavier than the outgoing Spring - of which 140,000 have been sold in Europe since its original launch in 2021. The key to its lightness is keeping the Spring small and simple. The battery is only 26.8kWh in capacity (or just a single kWh more than that used in a plug-in Porsche Panamera) for a start; a smaller battery obviously doesn’t need as long to charge, doesn’t require as much cooling, doesn’t take up as much space and so on. It’s all to the Spring’s benefit. 

The important numbers are 65hp (there’s 45hp for those that really want it), 0-62mph in less than 14 seconds and a WLTP range of ‘more than 137 miles’, with certification pending. Dacia claims consumption of ‘below 14.6kWh/62 miles’, or 4.25 miles per kilowatt hour. The battery can be charged from 20 per cent to 100 per cent on a 7kW wallbox in four hours, or a 30kW charger can do 20 per cent to 80 per cent in 45 minutes. That 7kW figure will likely be important as an urban runaround, being plugged in at supermarket chargers and so on. Nobody is going to be doing mega miles looking for the next Ionity; Dacia’s data from existing owners suggest an average of 23 miles a day. It offers vehicle-to-load charging and regenerative braking for the first time, too.

A significant part of this Spring update is about giving the 3.7m-long EV a more recognisable Dacia look. So it gets the new brand grille, the Y-shaped light signatures and some smart new colours like the Brick Red seen here. As with all new Dacias, there’s no chrome anymore, and the door protectors can be removed for those who like to live parking life dangerously. The interior, too, has been refreshed, with all models getting a seven-inch digital dash and the plusher models that people will actually buy (like the Extreme seen here) adding a 10-inch central display also.

Elsewhere, the YouClip points recently announced for the Duster are also in the Spring. It’s back to basics but it’s not boring, as we’ve come to expect from Dacia of late. Additional goodies for UK Spring buyers include a bigger boot than the original car, now with up to 1,004 litres (308 with the seats up), an optional 35-litre frunk and a 3D-printed cupholder. There’s a five-star Euro NCAP rating, too, for anyone who needs convincing about precious cargo in the bargain basement EV.

In the UK, there will be Essential, Expression and Extreme trims - just like the rest of the Dacia range. It’ll be interesting to see if buyers follow existing ICE and hybrid buyers by going for the top-of-the-range Extreme (which tends to be the most popular spec) or fully lean into the - hopefully - cheap-as-chips appeal. An Essential will have a USB port, cruise control, remote central locking, electric front windows and rear parking sensors - almost like the old days of kit lists. The Expression gets air con and 15-inch wheels, so that’s probably a bare minimum for most, then Extreme adds the copper accents, rear electric windows, central screen, V2L charging and phone mirroring. It’s easy to imagine many not considering anything but Extreme. The Spring currently starts at just under £15k in Europe. Less than £20,000 and some good lease deals might see that 140,000 total added to quite quickly…


Author
Discussion

SydneyBridge

Original Poster:

11,406 posts

185 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Sure they will sell as many as they can make and import

Numeric

1,499 posts

178 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Perfect for my Mum who literally goes no further than 10 miles anymore.

It's the endless short journeys that cause her cars issues, exactly the journeys these cars are good at.

One thing I've noticed as well, PCP often works in my experience for these types of drivers, because of the low mileage the cost is quite reasonable while their capital can stay in the bank.

Bobtherallyfan

1,497 posts

105 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Are you sure about that NCAP rating?


cerb4.5lee

43,317 posts

207 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes

vikingaero

12,825 posts

196 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Looks like a Suzuki Ingis

Jazoli

9,591 posts

277 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes
Millions of vans and lorries have similar or worse performance and they manage just fine, the same with base 1.0 and 1.2 small cars, just because you can't pull out and go straight to dominating the 'fast' lane doesn't mean there will be an issue for anyone driving one.

Zero Fuchs

2,749 posts

45 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes
It's the answer to all those saying EVs are too powerful laugh

Never happy wink

cerb4.5lee

43,317 posts

207 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Jazoli said:
cerb4.5lee said:
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes
Millions of vans and lorries have similar or worse performance and they manage just fine, the same with base 1.0 and 1.2 small cars, just because you can't pull out and go straight to dominating the 'fast' lane doesn't mean there will be an issue for anyone driving one.
Yes and it was a bit tongue in cheek really, and lets be honest, these won't go anywhere near a motorway/dual carriageway anyway.

cerb4.5lee

43,317 posts

207 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Zero Fuchs said:
cerb4.5lee said:
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes
It's the answer to all those saying EVs are too powerful laugh

Never happy wink
True! hehe

Mammasaid

5,434 posts

124 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Jazoli said:
cerb4.5lee said:
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes
Millions of vans and lorries have similar or worse performance and they manage just fine, the same with base 1.0 and 1.2 small cars, just because you can't pull out and go straight to dominating the 'fast' lane doesn't mean there will be an issue for anyone driving one.
This could replace my wife's car, which she shares with her parents. It never sees a motorway or DC from one month to another so I'm sure we can cope with 14s to 60. It seems very fit for purpose as a 2nd car.

BRR

1,902 posts

199 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
I think this is brilliant, this is the best use case for an electric car, cheap and with a range that is more than enough for what it will be used for, if I had to do a lot of local / city driving I'd definitely buy one

Nomme de Plum

7,050 posts

43 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes
So ? I regularly see guys in their mega powerful large ICEs cruising up the slip road at an eye watering 45mph and merging onto the left lane . The one's that really annoy me pull from the left lane on the slip road onto the right hand lane making me hit the brakes hard as I'm already well over 60MPH.

To put things into perspective the 0-60MPH time of a Lotus Cortina was 9 seconds. and a Dacia Duster Diesel 0-60 is the same as a Spring. It's also relatively light pretty cheap.

Magikarp

1,687 posts

75 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
0 to 60 in under 14 seconds...where do I sign? biggrin

I bet this is interesting/scary when you're joining a dual carriageway/motorway on a short slip road for sure! yikes
I’m not entirely sure you’re the intended target, junior.

Neill-l9qpf

71 posts

105 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
This is the type of EV that the market has been crying out for.

Manufacturers have got caught up in an endless battle for power and range, adding gadgets and gismos and ending up with too powerful, too heavy, to expensive EVs as a result.

The top selling ICE cars in Europe have been small hatchbacks, Corsa, Clio, Fiesta for years, this is a car that might be realistic for those customers.

Baldchap

9,598 posts

119 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
The thing I have noticed about our Spanish Sandero, and the boy's old RS Twingo and once I started thinking about it, a lot of Renault stuff over the years, is that you don't actually sit straight.

The pedals are slightly off to the side, or the seat is, or something odd is going on, which means you sit at maybe five degrees off straight. It doesn't sound like much, but I find it's the difference between having to concentrate and constantly correct your course and just driving normally like you would in a normal car. I'd put the problem down to me, but when I got back in my B5 yesterday after a month of Sandero, the difference in driving position is really noticeable. Glad I'm not making the journey home in the Dacia.

The longer I live with our Dacia (up to 6000km now) the less I like it.

A city EV is absolutely the best EV use case, I just hope it's better implemented than our Sandero.

ChocolateFrog

34,954 posts

200 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Looks good, the perfect city runabout.

Having the charge port on the front is a bit of a pain though. Not only will it be filthy in the winter it means parking nose in on the drive.

Edgey1

53 posts

57 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
I remember back in the '80s motoring journalists main bugbear was to criticise the poor rear three quarter view when most cars had thin pillars. Never any mention of it now, and just look at it on this Spring!

Simoninspalding

173 posts

38 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Bobtherallyfan said:
Are you sure about that NCAP rating?
Methinks someone misread the press release - it has 5 stars on GREEN NCAP. The previous version got 1 star in the safety NCAP in 2021, with chest protection rated as "marginal"!

David87

7,001 posts

239 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
Cheap, but no good for the Essex to Aberdeen commute that I have to do whilst towing a mini digger. wink

In seriousness though, this looks to be a pretty great runaround / station car etc. and appeals in the way all basic Dacias do. Hits the mark of actually being a useful car, rather than the kind of useless Citroën Ami.

greggy50

6,274 posts

218 months

Wednesday 21st February 2024
quotequote all
You can get a 2023 Zoe with 7k miles for £15k which will do nearly another 100 claimed miles and has twice the power.

https://www.autotrader.co.uk/car-details/202311284...

If this is £18/19k in the UK for a decent specification its still too much imo for the range/performance and I suspect on PCP it will be expensive due to the depreciation.

When its 1 year old and about £10/11k maybe I can se it being decent value.

P.S. EV owner so nothing against them!