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First impression of our new Inster

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2.5K views 26 replies 10 participants last post by  Expatman12  
#1 ·
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We picked up our new Inster today. Of course we like it (otherwise we wouldn't have bought it).

Having owned three Hyundai cars (ix20, i10 and Bayon) previously, I'm particularly pleased not to have lost anything that's good about those (except size of course). I'm particularly enjoying not having a manual transmission, that the car is nippy, but still pretty good on the motorway, and especially the intelligent cruise control which drops me back when someone cuts in too close after overtaking me as I potter along at 60mph.

We have a couple of reasonably full days of driving coming up in the next week or two, so are looking forward to working out the practicalities of charging (having no home charger). Seeing as both of us are retired now, we're rarely in a hurry so I'm sure for us it'll go just fine.

Our local dealer, Platinum Hyundai in Chippenham has looked after us super well. They have this new marketing thing where they take a polaroid of customers with their new car, and pin it up in the show room, so that's us with the Inster.
 
#9 · (Edited)
Like the presenter, I’m torn between these two cars (or will be when I next change car ), but for me the width of the Renault 5 at 1808mm https://www.speakev.com/posts/3707245/ excluding mirrors puts me off. https://www.speakev.com/threads/mor.../threads/more-than-150-car-models-too-big-for-regular-uk-parking-spaces.179716/ I prefer the narrower Inster‘s width. However, the R5 is definitely the better looking car externally and I find reviewers attempts at talking up the Inster‘s styling a bit much. It’s dull. The Inster also lacks a bit in acceleration compared to most cars I’ve owned. I’d want about 8 or 9 seconds 0-60.

Both car specifications have their frustrations. The R5 for instance doesn’t have heater seats unless you buy the top of the range model and I believe that blind spot monitoring only comes on the Inster with the top specification cross version, which I don’t like.
 
#12 ·
1 month later we're still loving the Inster. The high up driving position and good amount of space for (2) passengers in the back really suits us, and it's so easy to drive (as would many EVs be to be fair, but this is our first EV).

We've averaged 4.86 miles/kWh over 1,400 miles.

We've not seen another Inster "in the wild" yet, but then again I've not seen a Renault 5 yet either.
 
#13 ·
Picked up our Inster Cross middle of July. Went for the cross to get blind spot monitoring and surround view camera. Love the car and its size suits us very well. My only two niggles are the radio reception is poor, dealer checked it and said can’t find any fault and the tire pressure monitor doesn’t show individual tyre pressures as on all other cars I’ve owned.
 
#15 ·
Had our Inster 02 for a month now, bought as a second car to be used for mainly urban and short journeys. Very impressed with the car, ride is comfortable and it is tardis like in its interior space. With the rear seats set back there is limousine like knee room in the back and plenty of headroom. We like the elevated driving position and performance is more than adequate for our use, quick get away from rest to urban driving speeds. Cabin is bright and welcoming - we chose the light interior feeling that the dark interior was too bland for a car like the Inster. Have used it once on the motorway and it was fine, accelerated up to M way speed without problem and cruised at that speed relatively quietly; would I like to take a 250 mile+ motorway journey in it? Probably not as our petrol Mini Countryman would be more suited to long distance high speed driving - however I think the Inster would be quite acceptable for long journeys apart from having to recharge at less than 200 mile range at motorway speeds. That is the same problem with the vast majority of EV’s and is the reason why my nephew who has a Tesla chooses to take his wife’s diesel car on any longish journeys - a 3 hour wait at Exeter services was the convincing factor!
The Inster is adaptable and ideally suited for urban use yet has the “toys” - heated front seats, heated steering wheel, adaptable cruise control, distance and lane keeping assistance etc. we have got used to.
It might not be as “sexy” as the Renault 5 but in terms of practicality it can’t be beaten. And practicality with a city/urban car is what we, and I suspect, most people need.
Using Octopus Intelligent Go with an OHME charge point kept charge costs to an absolute minimum, especially when Octopus offers 1/2 price overnight charging - that’s 3.5p per KwHr - so fuel costs are negligible. Range charged to 80% is about 200 miles which seems to be fairly accurate even with A/C in these hot summer days.
So overall we are very pleased with the Inster and would recommend it to anyone.
 
#17 ·
It’s just a great little car, review in this weeks AutoExpress versus BYD Dolphin Surf came down marginally in favour of BYD because it was cheaper even though the reviewer admitted the Inster was a better car! They obviously missed the announcement that Hyundai have reduced the price of the Inster so even on a financial basis the Inster wins. However, reviews which base their findings on price are highly suspect in my opinion. You have to live with the car for 3+ years so why would you choose a lesser car to save a few pennies a month?
 
#19 ·
To offer an alternative view, we've had our Inster since May and we're already looking to get rid of it. Areas of disappointment are
  • Driver Attention Warning - the camera monitors your eyes and if you briefly look away, towards the radio or heating controls, you get a bleeping and flashing warning. You have to turn it off each time you turn the car on. I could tape over the camera I guess.
  • Driver Attention Warning 2 - within 5 minutes / 3 miles the coffee cup symbol appears and advises one to take a break. Pathetic.
  • Intelligent Speed Limit display - often wrong and sometimes even shows 80mph!
  • Intelligent Speed Limiter - since the speed limit detection is often wrong this renders the limiter as useless. Can be on the motorway and suddenly the car thinks the local limit is 30mph and slows the car down. Dangerous and annoying. Also the auto change of the limiter only works above 50mph. Our other car, Honda Jazz, works flawlessly and the Renault 5 I just test drove works well too so it's clearly a Hyundai problem.
  • Ride quality - reviews have praised the ride but I find it bouncy down B roads. I can offer excuses, like its only small with a heavy battery, what can I expect, but I find it unpleasant.
  • Radio reception - poor
We've got 2 cars, the Inster and Honda Jazz. The plan was to use the Inster for all sub 200 mile round trips because at an overnight rate of 7p per unit we're quids in. However the Jazz is by some distance a more pleasurable drive so we pick up the Honda keys and the Inster is stuck in the garage. Obviously we're going to take a loss on the Inster but life's too short to say we'll stick it out for 3/4 years just for financial prudence.
 
#24 ·
It seems you have 2 very similar sized cars, although the Inster is EV and the Jazz is hybrid, so I’m not sure why you bought the Inster at all? Basically anything you “save” in fuel costs on the Inster will be more than eaten by depreciation of the Inster - or any other EV you might choose to buy - including the Renault 5E.
We also have 2 cars, a petrol Mini Countryman for longer journeys (30 miles +) where the size, comfort and lack of range anxiety is great and the Inster for short journeys around town where the diminutive size is valuable for narrow city streets and makes parking a doddle. If I could have only one car it would be the Countryman because of long distance refinement and comfort. However, if we could only have one car and it had to be an EV I wouldn’t choose anything as small as the Renault 5 or Inster, probably something like a Skoda Enyaq or Elroq both of which offer longer range and more comfort than Inster or Renault or any other small EV.
I assume you have turned the volume of the annoying “bongs” right down and disabled all the alarms you can? I do agree that what the Inster needs - and all 2025 cars - is a button to which you can allocate all the annoying alarms etc. and that button would allow you to switch the alarms off with just one or two clicks. Hopefully at some time soon the safety boards who insist on these “safety” alarms will realise they are likely to cause more accidents than they prevent because drivers get so frustrated trying to silence them that they lose concentration on the road!
 
#22 ·
Driver Attention Warning on various Hyundai models is discussed in great detail over on the Hyundai forum:
https://www.hyundai-forums.com/threads/driver-attention-warning.718297/ The reactions to it are indeed 'marmite'.

Personally I think it's a good thing, and I rarely trigger it.

There are some interesting comments there about how some kinds of sunglasses prevent it from working effectively. I don't wear sunglasses myself so can't add much.

The only assist feature I have disabled in our Inster is the one which quietly beeps whenever the speed limit changes.