Buying an electric car introduces a whole new world of facts and figures to learn about and compare. To help, we’ve created this handy data card to give you all the crucial pieces of the EV puzzle.
The Nissan Leaf has long led the charge of battery electric vehicles in Australia and is available here as a base-model hatchback Leaf and the longer range Leaf e+.
Powered by a 40kWh battery, the Nissan Leaf has a single 110kW/320Nm electric motor and delivers around 270km (WLTP) on a single charge.
The Nissan Leaf e+ features a larger 62kWh battery which delivers 160kW of power and 340Nm of torque in normal driving conditions. The Leaf e+ has a driving range of around 385km and starts from $60,490 (plus on-roads).
2021 Nissan Leaf – data table
Leaf | Leaf e+ | |
Price (MSRP) | $49,990 | $60,490 |
Format | Single motor, front-wheel drive | Single motor, front-wheel drive |
Power | 110kW | 160kW |
Torque | 320Nm | 340Nm |
Battery size | 40kWh | 62kWh |
Range (WLTP) | 270km | 385km |
Energy use | 17.1kWh/100km | 18kWh/100km |
Max charge speed | 50kW DC | 100kW DC |
Plug type | Type 2 AC / CHAdeMO DC | Type 2 AC / CHAdeMO DC |
Weight (tare) | 1594kg | 1736kg |
Boot space | 405L / 1176L | 405L / 1176L |
The Nissan Leaf and Leaf e+ come with a Type 2 charging cable and a wallbox can be arranged through your Nissan dealer.
Approximate charging times – 0-80 per cent
Home (up to 2.4kW) |
Wallbox (up to 7.7kW) |
Three-phase (up to 11kW) |
Public (up to 50kW DC) |
Maximum | ||
Nissan Leaf | 40kWh | 13h 20min | 4h 09min | 2h 55min | 38min | 19min @50kW |
Nissan Leaf e+ | 62kWh | 20h 40min | 6h 26min | 4h 31min | 1h | 30min @100kW |
The post 2021 Nissan Leaf: Fact sheet appeared first on Drive.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar