Hyundai developing prototype EV on dedicated E-GMP platform

https://www.autoblog.com/2019/06/28/hyundai-prototype-ev-dedicated-e-gmp-platform/

Business Korea reports that Hyundai

is piecing together a prototype on the

South Korean

carmaker’s Electric-Global Modular Platform (E-GMP). Suppliers have been asked to provide parts, and according to “sources in the automobile industry,” the first working example will be ready come this December. Labeled with the code “NE,” the bodystyle is described as a compact SUV, with a range of around 450 kilometers on a charge. That’s likely a WLTP-based figure; the

Kona’s EV’s

64-kWh battery can power that small

crossover

to

a WLTP-rated 449 km

. The U.S.

EPA

rated the same vehicle at 258 miles, or 415 km.

Part of

Hyundai’s

assault on this year’s Consumer Electronics Show was the

Elevate “walking car” concept

— a Transformer that turns into a “

Star Wars”

AT-AT. The mountain-climbing contraption was built on the E-GMP platform. In conjunction with the Elevate, Hyundai announced that one component of its future mobility roadmap was to “introduce

EV’s

built on [the] new dedicated platform,” which would signal a move away from models like the Kona EV and

Ioniq EV

that share their chassis with ICE-powered models.

The E-GMP platform will be enhanced by an innovation developed at tool-making subsidiary Hyundai-Wia

called the Integrated Drive Axle (IDA)

. The IDA combines the driveshaft and wheel bearing assembly, said to

make for a stronger component

and a “quieter and more stable driving experience.”

According to a Hyundai exec, a primary benefit of the E-GMP will be in offering customers “customizable features, allowing drivers to alter space and configuration more efficiently.”

Business Korea

says a concept of the coming EV will be revealed in June next year. By hewing to the general trend for Hyundai to start

selling a car

six months after the concept reveal,

BK

believes the production EV “will enter mass production by early 2021 as planned.” That strikes us as absurdly optimistic, since Hyundai’s still gathering parts to build a prototype, and a new EV on a new platform will require more than one year of testing. Whenever the NE arrives, it will be an important part of Hyundai’s plan to put

44 electrified models on sale by 2025

.

via Autoblog https://ift.tt/1afPJWx

June 28, 2019 at 09:23AM

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