CyberNewbie
Established Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2025
- Messages
- 71
- Reaction score
- 37
- Points
- 30
- Location
- Peak District, UK
- Driving
- Cyberster
I totally agree. Especially bad on roads that feature rapid, repetitive undulation (small elevation changes occurring every few meters, creating a wave-like surface).
Well, I have had the Cyberster for two months now and can truly say it is up there as one of the most fun cars I have owned. There are a few design issues that hopefully will be addressed in future versions but none deal breakers.
The suspension is one area that really needs addressing and @m0rph described it perfectly. We drove over the Snake Pass* twice yesterday and this road is a real challenge for the suspension on the Cyberster GT. My wife was in the car with me and she felt like she was being thrown all over the place. As driver I was aware but did not bother me as much.
I don't have enough knowledge of the engineering challenges, but will suspension issues be inherent in all EV roadsters simply due to the weight and dynamics of the batteries? It will be interesting to see how the competition handles suspension as new roadsters appear on the market. Porsche sound like they are trying something different with the batteries mid-mounted in a stacked configuration. Suspect this will create other issues but time will tell.
*As a footnote, if you are near the Peak District I would recommend making a detour to drive the Snake Pass with the soft top down, a beautiful drive.