The production 2021 BMW iX3 electric SUV
has been been caught with its covers down in China where it will be produced by
Brilliance-BMW. Other than the different wheels and the oddly placed BMW logo
on the center cap, which is either some protective wrap or digitally placed by
whoever took the pics, it looks the same as the Euro model. The leaked images
also include a set showing the different Chinese market model variations with
colored grilles and body trimmings, while the spec sheet confirms previously
available information. It shouldn’t be long before BMW officially presents
their new EV.
Despite being among the first luxury car
manufacturers to launch an all-electric vehicle (the i3), BMW does not seem to
move fast enough when it comes to launching mainstream EVs. The BMW iX3, in
particular, had a too long gestation period, especially considering that it’s
based on the X3, a vehicle that already exists, and it wasn’t developed from
scratch.
BMW unveiled the Concept iX3 in October
2018 and yet the production model has not been launched yet. Mind you, the debut
is probably not that far away as official photos have started to do the rounds
on social media. The most significant visual change compared to the concept is
the grille, which continues to feature two separated ‘kidneys’ instead of the
study’s Kia-esque iteration where the two grilles communicated with each other.
It looks like BMW has had enough of kidney grille controversies and played it
safe here.
Everything else looks just as you would
expect, including the rear end with blue trim pieces where the exhaust pipes
would be on a regular BMW X3. The BMW iX3 will feature a 74 kWh battery pack
good for more than 440 km of range in the WLTP test cycle. The
battery powers an electric motor rated at 282 HP and 400
Nm of torque. The rear mounted motor drives the rear wheels and there’s no
official indication an AWD iX3 variant will be offered.
The lack of an AWD variant is reportedly
the main reason why BMW won’t offer the iX3 in the United States. The iX3 will
be made in China by the BMW Brilliance joint venture starting this year. The
model’s exact launch date remains uncertain given the current coronavirus
pandemic.