It has built 100 examples of the M-Byte, says it goes on sale this year.
It's not often that an automotive CEO emphasizes in a press event
that the vehicle he's talking about is "real," but given that the
company in question, Byton, plans to launch its first electric vehicle later this year, a crossover
named the M-Byte, from its factory in Nanjing, China (a plant that
doesn't yet have its manufacturing permit from the Chinese government),
and given he's talking from a stage at the 2019 CES, perhaps the
assurance that this isn't four-wheel vaporware is understandable.
What's more, it is all the more impressive to note that Dr. Carsten Breitfield, CEO and co-founder of Byton, and the other co-founder and president, Dr. Daniel Kirchert, introduced the M-Byte just last year at CES, then even more conceptual than it is now.
Plans call for the production of the M-Byte to commence later this year, with sales occurring in China in Q4, to be followed by sales in the U.S. and Europe in Q3 2020.
The M-Byte will come in two versions, one a RWD model with a 71-kWh battery that should provide a range of 250 miles, and another, AWD, with a 95 kWh battery that provides a 325-mile range. The vehicle can be recharged to 80 percent within 30 minutes. It features over-the-air update capability, as well as what is described as Level 3 autonomy.
What's more, it is all the more impressive to note that Dr. Carsten Breitfield, CEO and co-founder of Byton, and the other co-founder and president, Dr. Daniel Kirchert, introduced the M-Byte just last year at CES, then even more conceptual than it is now.
Plans call for the production of the M-Byte to commence later this year, with sales occurring in China in Q4, to be followed by sales in the U.S. and Europe in Q3 2020.
The M-Byte will come in two versions, one a RWD model with a 71-kWh battery that should provide a range of 250 miles, and another, AWD, with a 95 kWh battery that provides a 325-mile range. The vehicle can be recharged to 80 percent within 30 minutes. It features over-the-air update capability, as well as what is described as Level 3 autonomy.
© Provided by Oath Inc. Byton M-Byte |
The most notable number — or at least the one that Brietfield and
Kirchert emphasized at CES — is 48, which is the width, in inches, of
the "Shared Experience Display." In other words, think of the entire
width of the instrument panel, and there it is. This provides all manner
of infotainment, all at once.
When asked about the potential for driver distraction vis-Ã -vis a screen that is found, say in a Tesla,
Breitfield replied that he actually owns a Tesla and finds that having
to glance right to see the screen in that vehicle takes his eyes away
from the direction of travel. The information's right in front of him on
the M-Byte screen.
For control of the massive screen, there is a 7-inch driver table in the center of the steering wheel just above the airbag.
And to allow the front seat passenger some say in what's being
displayed (or played on the audio system), there is an 8-inch touchpad
in the center console.
Because the M-Byte is considered to be
something of a digital technology tour-de-force, the driver can interact
with the vehicle via touch, voice (they're using Amazon Alexa), facial
recognition, hand gestures, and, yes, even hard buttons and a couple of
stalks (turn signals and wipers: head designer Benoit Jacob acknowledged
that these are "bullet-proof solutions").
The first driveable
Bytons were produced in August 2018. By the end of 2018, the company had
produced 100 vehicles. The production facility is still in the process
of being fully outfitted. When full production is reached, there will be
a capacity of 300,000 vehicles per year. (There is also a second model,
the K-Byte, planned for 2021 and another vehicle for 2023.)
Brietfield
anticipates that the company will sell 50 percent of its output in
China, 30 percent in the U.S. and the remainder in Europe.
And
here's a number that may be more remarkable than the size of the Shared
Experience Display: the vehicle is to start at $45,000.
When it was pointed out to Brietfield that a competitor in the EV
space has talked about a $35,000 vehicle that has yet to become real,
he replied, "I know how to make a $45,000 vehicle. I don't know how to
make a $35,000 one."
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