I agree. I like my LR Trophy because I can use all the performance and stay under the legal limit. If I had an XPower I would probably be frustrated how little I could use the full power, although I do get it would be enormous fun.
I know most of our members enjoy their XPowers responsibly, but to any that don't, please take a moment to reflect on your driving and the possible consequences for others.
You can tell people don't live in a rural setting here.
Busy road, joining with no slip road at 60mph. You could sit and wait, but you might be there forever with traffic backing up behind you. What you need is a punchy car that can safely get you into a gap.
Also dual carriageways that have essentially no proper slip road too, you have to get to 70mph in the safest way, I'm gonna floor it (sorry, not sorry). An example here on the A1 to a place I go a bit with the TF:
And that's a long one.
When you go to put your foot down and you sometimes get half the power you're expecting, it's not exactly safe. This is why the car should tell you before you do.
I want strong acceleration, I don't give a monkeys about top speed, hence a high powered EV.
And to be clear I'm talking about peak travel times here, which is not when I'm driving a 23 year old MG, or a 56 year old one, and then when traffic is really bad I use the bike, because if you're sat in traffic you're not, you are the traffic.
Ultimately after two years with the car I can say it's a bit like the Genie from Disney's Aladdin, "Phenomenal cosmic power! Itty bitty
living space battery." I've driven a Smart #1 Brabus and the drop in power at low SoC was no where near as much, and I'm hopeful the IM5 will be better too. Because genuinely it feels like going from a 3.0 turbo inline 6 (BMW B58) to a 1.5 turbo three pot (BMW B38) when it's cold (under 2ºc) and you're getting under 40% charge.
Maybe because I'm a lot younger than people who tend to own these cars, but when I learnt to drive I was taught to use the power of the car to get up to traffic speed asap.