MG HS +EV: PHEV for the family, long-term final

Dean Evans, Editor
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Specifications

Base price
$54,990
Clean Car Rebate
5750
Maximum power kW
189
Range (km)
52
Maximum torque Nm
370
Pros
  • EV range often exceeds claim
  • NZ’s cheapest PHEV SUV
  • Quick when charged and fuelled
Cons
  • Steps and pauses during gearshifts
  • Infotainment/buttons not intuitive
  • Electronic oddities

It did go quite fast. Both the time with our MG HS PHEV, and the car itself (with an asterisk). We normally test cars within a seven-day loan, but our long-termers (around 4-6 months) give us time to really learn and understand a car over a more intimate term, and there was a lot we learnt about MG’s plug-in. For a start, it’s confusingly called the +EV, MG’s ambiguous nomenclature – we’ll just call it PHEV.

There were also a few things we still didn’t get to grips with, like the way it would switch between EV and petrol modes seemingly at random. For the record, a PHEV is designed and works better prioritizing its EV battery range, but too often the MG would fire up its petrol engine in the garage, and we’d have to tap the EV button.

It’s also fast under the right conditions - that is, with a good amount of battery charge. For the name of science, we conducted some 0-100km/h tests in different states, and it proved fascinating… at least to number nerds like us.

MG claims 0-100km/h in 6.9 seconds, which is decently quick from just a 1.5-litre turbo four-cylinder petrol. We recorded 6.9 seconds from its full offering of 189kW of combined petrol and battery power. But with a drained battery, it lost two seconds of speed, recording 0-100 in 8.9 seconds! Test three, with a recharged battery in EV-only mode, it was even slower, a leisurely 14.7 seconds to 100km/h, from its 90kW offering. Still, in EV mode it’s both quieter, more efficient and faster at suburban speeds: 0-60km/h, for eg, is just 1.0 seconds slower.

So from a drivetrain angle, the MG HS PHEV does an impressive job, regularly meeting its claims of 52km (WLTP), and also its petrol use claim of 1.7l/100km, which is wildly achievable (or not) based on EV/charging use. Of note, on longer journeys, when the battery is depleted, fuel use rises to 7l/100km. Though on the plus side, with a seven-year warranty (also covering battery), there’s another persuading factor.

Personally, I really wanted to like the MG HS, and I do, but it’s not without its faults – given I spent the most time in it, I seemed to be the most critical… maybe because I’m possibly most easily annoyed.

However, in managerial style, I’ll deal with the positives first: its power and torque is impressive for a 1.5. Radar cruise works to stop-start, which I love. It has a chilled centre console. It has CarPlay/Android and it’s a great commuter that does an all-around admirable job.

The negatives are more, but I am being critical, so let me rapid fire them. While they may not be deal-breakers, they are good to know: the turning circle is a large 11.9m, 0.5m bigger than a RAV4. It requires 95 octane. Battery regen doesn’t work while on cruise control, even when downhill. EV regen isn’t adjustable. There is no option for DC fast charging, so AC/wallbox only, meaning the fastest charge into the 16.6kWh battery will still take four hours minimum. Radar cruise defaults to the farthest setting, rather than last-used. The reversing camera is both slow to respond and switches screens often at the worst times, just as you’re closing in/slowing down to an obstacle. The suspension is softly spring, which can prove floaty at times. And my biggest bugbear is the steps in the transmission: again, when charged and petrolled, it’s almost imperceptible, but the gearbox reserves four speeds for EV mode, and six gears for hybrid; around 50 and 80km/h, there is a step – a two-second pause – as it shifts. So very 1990s.

These issues are all relatively minor and would all very easily be fixed and remedied in a future update. Looming at it as a whole, it’s a very value-packed PHEV, and one which offers a lot, even considering our model was the top-spec Essence, at $54,990, or $49,240 after the Clean Car cashback. With Mitsubishi’s latest Outlander moving up a scale or two, and Ford’s Escape ST PHEV entry model priced at $61k, the $51k Excite’s entry level price highlights it as a great value PHEV and NZ’s cheapest SUV PHEV, second only to the Prius Prime in PHEV.

So a little sad to see it goes, but the MG HS +EV (OK, just this once) endeared itself as an economical SUV worthy of a step into the clean car future.

MG HS +EV

ENGINE: 1.5-litre turbo-petrol four, 16.6kWh battery and electric motor
POWER: 189kW/370Nm (combined)
GEARBOX: 10-speed automatic, (4 electric, 6 hybrid),
FWD ECONOMY: 1.7l/100km, EV range 52km (WLTP)
PRICE: $54,990 (eligible for $5750 Clean Car Discount)

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