Here'sa utube vid on the BYD Dolphin vs MG4 in Australia. Oh my BYD is notdoing well down under.
Totally agree, definitely not like for like and certainly a smaller car which isn't going to suit everyone's needs.This guy is comparing apples and oranges
The byd is a city car 40 kilowatt battery the one being sold in the UK will be a 60 kilowatt battery and a higher rated motor
Having a few hammers and wrenches behind you does not qualify you for corrosion analysis
The area showing corrosion had parts s sealed and bolted them and then dipped for galvanic isolation
The pictures were taken of scrapped car and that area was left exposed to oxygen which caused the light rusting.
As I understand the blade battery is less prone to fire and has been tested with a nail being driven through it.
I visit this site to be informed and secondly entertained in this case neither
I'm not saying that BYD are any better or worse than MG just to be a balance both are china manufactured
I think the point he made was about the $100 difference and for that money they are a comparison.Totally agree, definitely not like for like and certainly a smaller car which isn't going to suit everyone's needs.
As you have said the blade batteries are amongst the best out there, I read somewhere that Tesla were apparently using/looking to use them
If you are comparing cars do you not look at similarly priced cars to evaluate value for money ?There has to be more in common than price to make it a like for like comparison
I look at various cars that fit into the category that I'm looking for, size, space, luggage space, performance, equipment, looksIf you are comparing cars do you not look at similarly priced cars to evaluate value for money ?
In fairness Top Gear is the only reviewer to give the Dolphin a bad review to my knowledge. All other reviews I have seen have been very positive.Top Gear does a 1st drive review. Make of it what you will -
BYD Dolphin review: trapped in the fishing nets of disappointment - Rated 4/10
£29,490 when new
The Dolphin’s biggest issue comes with the driving.
Full disclosure: the cars on the international launch of the Dolphin were all set in some sort of factory transport mode which doped the accelerator and delivery to comatose levels. A full pedal-to-carpet moment brought a full two seconds of nothing, followed by a throttle ramp measured in thousands of metres.
It’s very obviously set up for ride comfort. It’ll suck up potholes and big bumps like a champ, filtering out the worst of the small stuff without a problem. Which is very nice if you’re urban-based.
But the second thing you notice is that the car trades off any handling ability for that suppleness.
Go even slightly faster and it all falls to bits, offering a complete gamut of dynamic FWD weirdness; there’s actually enough grip, but the Dolphin will understeer at times, feel like it’s going to oversteer at others (at mild speed), buck if there’s a mid-corner bump and yes, it’ll porpoise over its own diagonal line (no pun intended) when faced with changing camber.
Bluntly, the BYD Dolphin simply feels unfinished. Or at least like a basic V.1
The brakes are also almost wilfully inconsistent - which feels like an issue with the pedal sensitivity in relation to the regenerative braking - and the steering completely uninterested in having a relationship with the front wheels.
And this wasn’t at terrifying or ridiculous performance car speed, just brisk driving on a twisty road. In fact, it felt a bit like the kind of unresolved performance delivered by the GWM Ora Funky Cat, suggesting that Chinese manufacturers might be better off employing a few more local engineers to set the cars for specific markets. Given that some of the impressions of the car seem largely satisfied with the handling, TG will drive a car again in the UK to see if the car was quietly broken - and not just hampered by software.
Put simply, the rear-wheel drive MG4 feels set up for UK roads and preferences; the Dolphin feels like a ‘world car’ that suits very few. And we know that the MG4 (owned by another Chinese company, SAIC) took on some UK suspension bods. It paid dividends.
Unfortunately, the Dolphin does also act a bit like it’s natural namesake in the fact that it’s always whistling, tooting and making some sort of noise. The advanced driver assistance systems are incredibly intrusive, maddeningly hard to switch off and not entirely gone when you do. The amount of times you may well find yourself interrogating the screens trying to divine what the faint electronic warning hoot was is actually more dangerous than a lack of interruption.
But the killer issue is that the Dolphin also weighs in at far more than we’d - secretly - hoped. You might assume that BYD would want to hit the UK/European market hard by giving us all the good stuff with aggressive pricing, attaining a beachhead in a market that knows precious little about the brand. MG showed exactly how to do that. Instead, the Dolphin undercuts the MG4 by a scant few quid, and it’s not a patch on that car. If the Dolphin had appeared for £20-25k, we’d forgive an awful lot. But it isn’t, so we won’t.
TG will test again when the car is in the UK and update our findings - but for now, this Dolphin isn’t ready to be released into the wild just yet.
Full Review -
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BYD Dolphin review: trapped in the fishing nets of disappointment Reviews 2023 | Top Gear
The first thing I thought when I looked at that, was ‘dolphin’. Admit it, it’s just quite nice to have a car with an actual name rather than a slew of numbers or something made-up. Even if it is a bit daft. And not quite as silly-sounding as the forthcoming BYD Seal.www.topgear.com
In fairness Top Gear is the only reviewer to give the Dolphin a bad review to my knowledge. All other reviews I have seen have been very positive.