2021 Polestar 2 First Test Drive: Is This the Driver’s EV?
Polestar wants to make the best performance EVs on the road. It’s off to a great start.MALIBU, California—Just a handful of years ago, Polestar was best known as a Swedish Touring Car Championship race team, and more recently as the performance-tuning arm of Volvo—among those who knew of it at all. But Volvo in 2015 bought Polestar, and Polestar for the past several years has been its own operation within the Geely/Volvo family of marques. It's dedicated to building not just high-performance cars, but, specifically, high-performance electric vehicles aimed at people who like to drive. The first car to come from the company, the Polestar 1, is a hybrid, but it was envisioned as a low-volume halo car that could serve as a sort of bridge for interested buyers to make the transition to the all-electric lifestyle. But from the 2021 Polestar 2 we've just taken for a test drive, and all of its cars from here forward, however, Polestar is all-electric, all the time.
That puts a heavy burden on the 2021 Polestar 2: Not only does it have to face down the established electric competition in a brutally difficult segment, it also has to be the standard bearer for the whole Polestar marque, at least until the Polestar 3 arrives with its even more crowd-pleasing crossover body form. But Polestar has a few tricks up its sleeve for its second act.
2021 Polestar 2: The Basics
Before we delve into our first test drive of the new Polestar 2 and how it compares to its primary competition, the Tesla Model 3 Performance, we should refresh ourselves on the Polestar 2's hardware. Dual permanent magnet alternating current (PMAC) synchronous motors drive the front and rear axles independently, using the brakes to distribute torque between the wheels of each axle as determined by the sport-oriented stability-control system. Total system output of the dual-motor setup is 408 horsepower and an even more substantial 487 lb-ft of torque. With a 78-kWh battery pack (75 kWh of which is accessible), the Polestar 2 claims 291 miles of range in the WLTP cycle (but we expect something closer to 275 miles range when EPA-rated), while being able to run the 0-60-mph sprint in just 4.45 seconds on its way to a top speed of 125 mph.
With all of that power and torque, you might expect the Polestar 2 to be a bit quicker than it is, but then you have to remember this is an electric car, and it's rather heavy compared to a combustion-powered car of similar dimensions; curb weight is 4,680 pounds. Of that weight, 51 percent of it sits over the front axle, 49 percent over the rear, meaning it's about as well-balanced as a Mazda Miata, despite weighing more than twice as much.




