Even while scraping ice off its frozen windows, I had warm summer sun, sea and surf in my heart as I climbed aboard Volkswagen’s new ID Buzz.
For as deliveries start this week, VW has managed to blend the free-spirited feel of the original 60s and 70s hippy campervan with 21st-century electric zero emissions, green high-tech. And it really is fun.
But it’s certainly not cheap. A 1st Edition model launched in June costing £62,995 sold out in a thrice.
Re-generation: The VW ID Buzz is an electric version of its hippy era Camper
There are now two launch models — Life, which runs on 19in wheels and costs from £57,111, and the fully-stocked, higher-spec Style, which runs on 20 in wheels and is priced from £61,915, though with extras mine cost £65,465 on the road as tested with an orange and white interior.
The rear-wheel drive ‘bus’ has a 204 hp (150 kW) electric motor powered by a 77 kWh lithium-ion battery and linked to a direct drive single-speed automatic gearbox that delivers rest to 62 mph in 10.2seconds up to a top speed of 90mph, and with a decent range of 255 miles.
It has two conventional doors at the front, two van-like sliders behind, and a big lift-up power-hatch at the rear. There’s a vast, flat raised boot with ample room below and the rear 60:40 split bench seats fold down.
The interior is smart, bright and clutter free with soft-touch trim and a contemporary ‘Silver Birch’ veneer.
It has two conventional doors at the front, two van-like sliders behind, and a big lift-up power-hatch at the rear
For its size the Buzz nippy and highly manoeuvrable with a taxi-like tight turning circle
The biggest gripe is with VW trying to be too clever with the smart tech
Sit in the seat, touch the brake and everything powers up
The interior is smart, bright and clutter free with soft-touch trim and a contemporary ‘Silver Birch’ veneer
VW has managed to blend the free-spirited feel of the original 60s and 70s hippy campervan with 21st-century electric zero emissions
There are three drive modes: eco, comfort and sport – which is pretty feisty
There’s a vast, flat raised boot with ample room below and the rear 60:40 split bench seats fold down
Mastering the basics is a doddle. The key fob alerts the car of your approach. Sit in the seat, touch the brake and everything powers up. Twist the controller by the steering wheel forward and you’re off. Back for reverse. Press to park.
Then it get more complicated. My biggest gripe is with VW trying to be too clever with the smart tech (a fault I first encountered with the VW Golf and its slider). It’s fine having 1001 brilliant functions, but if accessing them via overly complex screen menus does your head in (as it did mine), it’s failed. Some simple, human-friendly knobs for basic functions would be helpful.
In desperation I resorted to voice-control to access some functions after scrolling endlessly in circles through dead-end screen options. It’s distracting and potentially dangerous. Fix it!
For its size the Buzz nippy and highly manoeuvrable with a taxi-like tight turning circle and this month it achieved a top five-star EuroNCAP crash test safety rating.
There are three drive modes: eco, comfort and sport – which is pretty feisty.
It’s nimble, does a decent lick down the motorway. You can increase the resistance for one-pedal driving and to generate more on-board charge.
There’s already a commercial VAT-free version of the Buzz priced from £38,125 and eligible for a £5,000 grant. Also in the pipeline is a seven-seater long wheel-base version, a 4X4, and a properly kitted out camper-van including ‘California’ variant for new and reborn 21st century hippies, adventurers, and surf-bums.
Can’t wait.