BYD Dolphin 2023 News

Tom White's Top 5 cars of 2023: From the BYD Dolphin to the Kia EV9
By Tom White · 25 Dec 2023
I didn't expect my entire list to be fully electric cars, but these five are all stand-outs in their own right.
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Testing trifecta for BYD: 2024 BYD Seal and Dolphin electric cars both score top marks for safety
By Chris Thompson · 26 Oct 2023
The second and third cars to be tested under new criteria in ANCAP's are both electric cars from China's increasingly popular BYD, and both have passed safety testing with flying colours.
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Electric motors are the best thing to have ever happened to Chinese cars as brands like BYD, MG and GWM go from laggers to leaders in record time | Opinion
By Andrew Chesterton · 30 Sep 2023
The thought first hit me as I was steering the MG4 51 Excite - one of Australia’s cheapest electric vehicles, and one that really should be pretty ordinary, given its bargain-basement status.
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Has BYD conquered supply chain delays? Want a new BYD Atto 3 SUV, Dolphin hatch or Tesla Model 3-challenging Seal sedan? Not a problem! Here's why...
By James Cleary · 24 Sep 2023
Vehicle supply has arguably been the Australian new-car market’s hottest talking point in 2023, and one recent newcomer to local showrooms, EV specialist BYD, has seemingly conquered the issue thanks to strategic investments in dedicated production capacity established in the brand’s Chinese factories.
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BYD wants to become a global electric car powerhouse and calls on Chinese compatriots to 'demolish the old legends'
By Tung Nguyen · 15 Aug 2023
China’s BYD has put out a call to action for compatriot car brands to step up on the world stage and “demolish the old legends” as it eyes further global proliferation.
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EVs are NOT off-roaders! And a lot needs to change before they are outback adventure vehicles | Opinion
By Marcus Craft · 09 Jul 2023
Whether you like it or not, EVs are well and truly here, and they’re here to stay.
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Is it worth buying one of Australia's cheapest electric cars? How the 2024 MG4 stacks up against the BYD Dolphin
By Tung Nguyen · 03 Jul 2023
Electric vehicles (EVs) have come to Australia in a big way this year, but most still remain out of the budget and reach of many locals just looking for a set of wheels to get them to the shops and back home.
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Still think cheap EVs are boring? "Tuned" BYD Dolphin Sport will be faster than most hot hatches as full electric vehicle range detailed
By Andrew Chesterton · 22 Jun 2023
The BYD Dolphin will arrive in Australia in three trim levels, with one of those being the country's cheapest EV, and another being a hot-hatch rivalling Sport model.
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Australia's cheapest electric vehicle! Game-changing BYD Dolphin pricing confirmed - and it's cheaper than the MG4!
By Andrew Chesterton · 22 Jun 2023
The BYD Dolphin will arrive in Australia wearing a pice tag of just $38,890, making it officially the country's cheapest EV, undercutting the just-announced MG4 by just $100.Fellow Chinese brand MG held the mantle of Australia's most affordable electric v
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Would BYD's large electric SUV work in Australia at this price? Toyota RAV4-sized, Tesla Model Y rivalling EV priced in China with up to 605km of driving range!
By Tom White · 21 Jun 2023
BYD has launched its latest fully electric SUV in China - dubbed the Song Plus - which sits above the Atto 3 in its line-up.It is actually a deep facelift of a previous model, and like other BYDs is also available as a PHEV, but if it were to come to Australia, expect it to follow the local importer’s EV-only strategy.The new look mirrors the design language of BYD's more recent offerings, including the Atto 3 SUV, Seal sedan, and Dolphin EV hatch, and size-wise it is slightly larger than mainstream mid-size favourites like the Toyota RAV4, Mazda CX-5, and Subaru Forester at 4785mm long, 1890mm wide, and 1660mm tall, placing it in the upper mid-size bracket.The Song Plus EV arrives in China with two battery sizes, either a 71kWh unit good for a 520km range, or an 87kWh unit good for a 605km driving range, both according to the slightly more lenient Chinese (CLTC) testing regime.Inside, there’s a slightly more upmarket treatment compared to the likes of the Atto 3 or Dolphin, with extended soft-touch materials, more gloss and chrome finishes for the dash, and a large digital instrument cluster alongside the brand’s signature rotating multimedia unit, which in this case is 15.6-inches across.Prices overseas are intriguing, with the entry-level 520km range grade starting from the equivalent of $35,000 Australian dollars, however the Atto 3 which arrives in Australia only comes in a high grade, locally starting from $48,011. Extrapolating prices across to the high-grade 72kWh Song Plus model would suggest an Australian start in the mid-$50,000 region if the local importer follows the same strategy as it has with the Atto 3. The long-range version, meanwhile, looks to attract price-tags closer to AUD$60,000.Base versions of the Song Plus score the same motor as the Atto 3, a front-mounted unit producing 150kW/310Nm, however higher-grade versions score an uprated unit producing 160kW/330Nm.Charging specs are yet to be detailed, but a claimed charging time of 47 minutes for the larger battery option suggests a DC charging speed of 100kW as opposed to the 80kW charging capacity of the smaller Atto 3.Next for BYD in Australia is the imminent launch of the Dolphin hatchback, with pricing to be announced on the June 22. The Dolphin is roughly Corolla-sized and it seems will come in two battery grades, a price-leading 340km range version with a 70kW/310Nm front motor, or a long-range 427km version with the same 150kW/310Nm motor as the larger Atto 3.Pricing will need to be trim to compete with the incoming MG4 hatch, which was just announced with a keen starting price of $38,990 before on-roads.Despite fielding just one model so far, BYD is storming up the sales charts in Australia, already ahead of storied players like Renault and closing in on Honda, Volvo, and Lexus.Should it be able to fill its line-up with the Seal sedan and Song Plus EV (or whatever it may be called for export markets) alongside the Atto 3 small SUV and Dolphin hatch the brand could have a real shot at establishing itself as a mainstream automaker in Australia.
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