Skoda Enyaq vRS Coupe Review: The greatest Skoda?!
Uploaded 2 years ago by carwow
Video Summary
- SportLine and VRS models get slightly sportier bumpers. - VRS models have a reflective strip that runs the length of the rear bumper. - Wheel sizes start at 19s and rise up to 21 inches. - The VRS gets its badging on the side. - SportLine and VRS cars have a more aggressive sportier front bumper. - There's a crystal grill. - It's more sporty with the sloping tailgate than the standard ENYAQ. - The VRS starts from about £55,000. - Normal ENYAQ starts from £39,000. - Google help me carwow to ensure you are paying a fair price. - The interior of the ENYAQ Coupe is the same as the normal ENYAQ. - The ride height is 30mm lower. - Seating position is a little closer to the ground. - There's a VRS steering wheel with three spokes and VRS badging. - Carbon fibre effect on the dash. - Body-hugging sport seats with VRS logo. - There’s under-seat storage, wireless charging, USB ports, a strange lozenge that’s used to move forwards and backwards. - There’s a small pocket for sunglasses on the side. - Door bins are a decent size and lined. - Knee room in the back seats is good. - Decent amount of headroom. - Panoramic glass roof is thinner. - There are storage pockets on the back and under the central seat. - Škoda hasn't included extra storage underneath the bonnet. - On a DC charger, its up to 175 kilowatts. - On AC its up to 11 kilowatts. - Range topping VRS has 299 horsepower. - Maximum power can only be called upon for a maximum of 30 seconds when the high-voltage battery charge is above 88%. - There’s decent traction with the four-wheel drive. - Not 60 is 5.79 seconds. - It feels competent, not extremely fun. - A main negative of driving around town is that because of the large rear pillar and small window, the blind spot of view is limited. - In town the reviewer prefers the standard ENYAQ. - No adaptive dampers come standard but can be included as part of the Max pack, for around £4,000. - The battery pack is 77 kilowatts and claimed to do 339 miles on a full charge. - It only tows up to 1,400 kilos, which is less than a Kia EV6. - The reviewer recommends shortlisting the ENYAQ Coupe but not specifically the VRS version.