2016 Nissan Leaf EV Quick Drive Review
The Electric Test DriveBargain-hunting EV-intenders, your time has come. Despite gas prices below $2 a gallon nationally, incentives on EVs might be enough to add one back on your shopping list. Before theChevrolet Boltarrives late in 2016—or early in 2017 if you can't find them at your local dealer—the 2016 Nissan Leaf available now offers more range than before, sending it back to the top of the affordable-EV pack. We recently took an extended test drive in a 2016 Leaf with its newly available 30-kW-hr battery pack and EPA-rated 107-mile range to see just how mainstream the best-selling electric really is.
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Just before the Leaf hits 200,000 sales worldwide this year, Nissan has greatly expanded the car's usability with a 30-kW-hr battery pack that adds 23 miles of range at a slight cost of 46 pounds of extra weight over the S trim's 24-kW-hr battery pack. An EPA-rated 107 miles of range for the 2016 Nissan Leaf SV and SL (compared with the 2016 Leaf S' 84 miles) leapfrogs the 2016 Kia Soul EV's 93-mile range among affordable electrics that also include the Ford Focus Electric and Volkswagen e-Golf.
The 2016 Leaf SV starts at $35,050 including destination, but MSRPs aren't especially relevant this late in the car's lifecycle. Incentives on the Leaf—and the Focus Electric—put the car's value into perspective. Before supporters of the $37,500 Bolt tout the car's not-yet-verified claim of a 200-mile range, keep in mind local offers on existing EVs. Near us on the Leaf, as this is written, Nissan is offering zero percent financing for 72 months on top of $4,000 cash back. Should offers near you be similar, this makes the Leaf an affordable alternative for Prius owners or open-minded midsize sedan drivers ready for a change.
Lotto tickets, tire-pressure checks, and drive-through car washes become the only reasons to spend time at gas stations when you daily-drive an EV. And although the 2016 Leaf isn't completely silent on the road, we can imagine stop-and-go commuting would be a different experience if the familiar sounds of an idling internal combustion engine were replaced by an incredible quiet. The only interruption to the hushed cabin is a high-pitched EV/hybrid sound that I didn't find especially intrusive, but it's something we noticed in acomparison testthat involved a 2011 Leaf, 2011 Prius, and 2011 Volt.
Hit wide-open throttle from a stop, and the 2016 Leaf SL responds quickly after a tiny delay. The perception of acceleration while passing, say from 25 mph to 45 mph, is even more impressive. Back in 2011, we drove a 2012 Leaf SL that hit 60 mph in aMotor Trend-tested 9.6 seconds, but the 2016 Leaf SL usually feels quicker than any 0-60 times might suggest.
The feel of the brake pedal will take some getting used to, especially if you end up driving most of the time in the B mode, which makes the regenerative braking system more aggressive any time you apply the brakes or lift off the throttle. After spending some time inMotor Trend'slong-term 2015 Kia Soul EV, associate online editor Austin Lott commented that he spent most of his driving time in the B mode, going so far as to note that with that mode on, "you can drive without using the brakes in most situations."









