logo
I drove pure electric Elroq vRS at Sweet Lamb rally complex – it corners tidily & is mega comfy but there's one downside

I drove pure electric Elroq vRS at Sweet Lamb rally complex – it corners tidily & is mega comfy but there's one downside

The Sun2 days ago
EVERYONE knows The Stig. He's the chatterbox racing driver from Top Gear.
But did you know there's another Stig who makes him look a bit slow?
7
7
7
7
Stig Blomqvist.
Absolute rally god.
He won the 1984 World Rally Championship at the wheel of an Audi Quattro.
He's also the man who cemented Skoda's motorsport credibility by finishing third on the 1996 Network Q Rally, in the snow, in a front-wheel drive Felicia, up against fire-spitting four-wheel drive Imprezas, Celicas and Sierra RS Cossies.
Proper giant-killing performance.
I remember sitting on a frozen tree stump in Kielder Forest watching the master in full flow.
Some bloke called Colin McRae piloted a Fabia WRC in 2005 and, for the last 15 years or so, Fabia has been hoovering up trophies in the second-tier WRC2 and other international championships.
The reason I'm telling you all this is because Skoda has properly earned the vRS — victory Rally Sport — badge it sticks on its spicy road cars. It's not a marketing gimmick.
It has years of motorsport expertise behind it.
So we thought we'd try the latest vRS, the pure electric Elroq vRS, at the famous Sweet Lamb rally complex in Llanidloes, mid-Wales.
5 Things you need to know about the new Skoda Elroq
It was a lot of fun.
We bolted on some all-terrain tyres, added underbody protection (we're not animals), and dialled down the traction control systems and, er, that was about it.
Pull the pin.
Elroq vRS is plenty quick enough off the line. The Czechs will tell you it's the fastest Skoda yet. But it's actually joint-fastest alongside the Enyaq vRS.
Two e-motors, one on each axle for all-wheel drive, pump out a meaty 340hp.
It'll do 0-62mph in 5.4 seconds, one second quicker than a petrol Octavia vRS, and top out at 111mph.
But what impresses most is the handling.
For a heavy vehicle (batteries weight a bit), it corners tidily.
The steering is light but accurate. The body is well tied-down, neither rolling on corners or floating when the road crests and dips.
We tried the very green Elroq vRS on smoother, less dusty B-roads and it was just as pleasing. Fast or slow.
It should easily do 280 miles on a full tank and can recharge to 80 per cent in a 26-minute tea-and-pee break.
7
7
The cabin is nicely appointed. Microsuede upholstery. Lime green stitching. The seats are mega comfy and will warm and rub your back.
The door pockets are carpeted. So nothing rattles. That 13in touchscreen is fast and easy to use.
Mind you, I'm a big fan of the regular £31,510 Elroq, so the all-singing vRS was always going to be good.
My only grumble is the price. We're talking £46,560. That's Mercedes CLA money.
But at least you can release your inner Stig.
SKODA unveils an Octavia-sized electric estate called 'Vision O' next month.
But it's exactly that, a vision. The real car's still three years away and it will co-exist alongside today's petrol and diesel Octavias for as long as they're allowed to continue.
There's a dinky £22k EV called 'Epiq' coming in 2026, followed by a seven-seat EV that's previewed by the 'Vision 7S' concept.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jaguar threatens to 'sue' National Rail in row over train operator's 'Rover' and 'Ranger' ticket names
Jaguar threatens to 'sue' National Rail in row over train operator's 'Rover' and 'Ranger' ticket names

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Jaguar threatens to 'sue' National Rail in row over train operator's 'Rover' and 'Ranger' ticket names

Jaguar Land Rover has threatened to sue National Rail over its use of 'rover' and 'ranger' on its tickets. The Indian-owned car manufacturer has handed the Rail Delivery Group, which is responsible for the National Rail website, a cease and desist letter. In the correspondence, they have instructed the company to stop using the terms 'ranger and rover' for its tickets, claiming it infringed on the 'Range Rover' trademark. Now, in a memo seen by The Telegraph, train firms are being instructed to remove any reference to 'ranger and rover' on their website. It confirmed the carmaker had objected to the use of both terms, and was considering getting in touch with rail firms who were using the phrase. However, the RDG has told train companies they could use the phrase 'ranger tickets and rover tickets. According to the memo, they claimed Jaguar Land Rover had vowed not to hit retailers with cease and desist letters if they used the amended names. Rover tickets, which gives travellers unlimited rail travel for a week, existed a decade before the Range Rover was created. British Rail introduced the original All-Line Rail Rover and cost £15 for a second class ticket, which nowadays would be the equivalent to £304, according to Bank of England inflation figures. Currently, seven-day All Line Rover second class tickets come with a £650 price tag. According to Land Rover Ireland, the first ever Range Rover revealed to the world in 1970. A Rail Delivery Group spokesman said: 'We are confident that our practices have always complied with intellectual property law and were happy to work with Jaguar Land Rover towards a resolution. 'After being made aware of a trademark query by JLR, we worked closely with them to make a minor change to how we describe our Ranger tickets and Rover tickets.' MailOnline has approached both National Rail and Jaguar Land Rover for comment. It comes shortly after, US President Donald Trump claimed Jaguar Land Rover is in 'absolute turmoil ' after the company's 'totally disastrous woke' rebrand. Earlier this month, Trump labelled the British car maker's recent advert, which featured brightly dressed models, as a 'total disaster' and 'stupid'. Trump was scathing of Jaguar as he compared the firm's fortunes to those of clothing brand American Eagle in a rant on his social media platform Truth Social. 'Sydney Sweeney, a registered Republican, has the "HOTTEST" ad out there. It's for American Eagle, and the jeans are "flying off the shelves",' he wrote. The US President labelled the British car maker's recent advert, which featured brightly dressed models (pictured), as a 'total disaster' and 'stupid' 'Go get 'em Sydney! On the other side of the ledger, Jaguar did a stupid, and seriously WOKE advertisement, THAT IS A TOTAL DISASTER! The CEO just resigned, and the company is in absolute turmoil. 'Who wants to buy a Jaguar after looking at that disgraceful ad. Shouldn't they have learned a lesson from Bud Lite, which went Woke.' Trump ended the post by saying that 'being woke is losers'. In July, the firm's CEO Adrian Mardell announced he would be retiring at the end of the year. Mardell, 64, has been at the company for more than three decades including the last two years as chief executive during one of the most transformative periods in the firm's recent history. Arguably his biggest involvement has been his role in Jaguar's controversial 'woke' rebrand and shift to an electric-only premium car brand from 2026. In July, JLR said it was axing 500 management roles, which are going as part of a voluntary redundancy programme for managers in the UK. A spokesman said: 'As part of normal business practice, we regularly offer eligible employees the opportunity to leave JLR through limited voluntary redundancy programmes.'

How Manchester City and Pep Guardiola got the 'fire in the belly' back: Erling Haaland's targets, the stars with most to prove, Hugo Viana's immediate impact and the truth about Gianluigi Donnarumma and Rodrygo
How Manchester City and Pep Guardiola got the 'fire in the belly' back: Erling Haaland's targets, the stars with most to prove, Hugo Viana's immediate impact and the truth about Gianluigi Donnarumma and Rodrygo

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

How Manchester City and Pep Guardiola got the 'fire in the belly' back: Erling Haaland's targets, the stars with most to prove, Hugo Viana's immediate impact and the truth about Gianluigi Donnarumma and Rodrygo

Pep Guardiola burst through one wing of an aristocratic villa that was in danger of becoming a little claustrophobic. A hoodie on, the guy sweltered in Sicilian heat at gone 9pm. A seemingly never-ending day still had some embers left. He looked frazzled and the season, a season that could define the final acts of Guardiola's time in England, hadn't even started yet.

How Luton Town stopped the slump: Matt Bloomfield reveals the turning point for the Hatters, the one thing they refuse to discuss and what's new this summer as they target rapid return to Championship
How Luton Town stopped the slump: Matt Bloomfield reveals the turning point for the Hatters, the one thing they refuse to discuss and what's new this summer as they target rapid return to Championship

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

How Luton Town stopped the slump: Matt Bloomfield reveals the turning point for the Hatters, the one thing they refuse to discuss and what's new this summer as they target rapid return to Championship

After back-to-back relegations and sinking from the Premier League to League One in little over a year, you could forgive the Luton Town powerbrokers if they spent their summer sitting around feeling sorry for themselves. But two days after the drop was confirmed, boss Matt Bloomfield walked into a room with chairman Gary Sweet, assistant manager Richard Thomas and operations chief James Mooney – and told them there was no point in looking back. From here, the only way is up.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store