Volkswagen has listened, and it has changed. Buttons, glorious buttons – you’ll find them pretty much everywhere you and I both might want them in this new VW ID Cross.
For years now, owners, journalists, internet commenters, my mum and probably your mum have taken issue with the haptic sliders and touch-heavy interfaces used by Volkswagen’s ID models.
The cabins of the ID 3 and ID 4, in particular, became a convenient shorthand for overzealous minimalism: capacitive steering wheel pads, fiddly temperature sliders, and a general absence of tactile bits, knobs, and switches.
With the new ID Cross, VW has rowed back – and is happy to admit that. The ethos behind Wolfsburg’s new affordable compact electric SUV is very much one of ‘back to basics’.
Underneath, the ID Cross takes a notably more traditional approach. It, like its VW ID Polo, Skoda Epiq and Cupra Raval cousins, is front-wheel drive, with a single motor on the front axle.
Suspension is by MacPherson struts at the front and a torsion beam at the rear – a torsion beam that is, admittedly, quite sophisticated. It has two-component bushings, with a high stiffness in longitudinal movement for a soft ride and a low stiffness in the vertical directions for low noise levels.
Inside, it’s pretty simple. There are ‘hard’ buttons (‘soft’ buttons being those on a screen, in VW parlance) for the climate controls, and the steering wheel gets a raft of buttons on either side in place of haptic panels. There’s even an on/off button for the power.
Window controls return to a conventional layout, and even the door handles are satisfyingly simple. It is, frankly, a relief.
The steering wheel itself is squarer than a poindexter in a 1950s Hollywood film. VW says it makes the screen behind it easier to see, and to be fair, it does.
That screen is dressed up to look like a Mk1 Golf’s binnacles, with mph representing, er, mph and energy usage replacing rpm. It also shows features such as lane-keeping assistance and the battery percentage.
Space is good, too. In VW terms, this pretty much offers a VW T-Roc level of space for a VW T-Cross-sized car.
The boot is huge, with a big underfloor storage area, much like with the similarly front-wheel-drive Ford Puma Gen-E. For all the buttons, I do wish the menu to decide whether you want normal or strong regen wasn’t so many menus deep.
With 208bhp and 214lb ft it’s pretty sharp off the mark. The thrust tails off quickly around 60mph, but it’s still not all that slow above that.
Weight, or a relative lack of it, really helps, with not only acceleration but also braking and ride comfort. At just over 1500kg the ID Cross is practically a welterweight for EVs – and it feels like it.
The brakes feel great. VW uses a sophisticated system that takes demand from the brake pedal and decides whether to use regenerative braking or the discs.
It can pull 2.2g from regen alone, which, helped by front-wheel drive (you don’t want 2.2g of retardation via the rear wheels while going round a corner, for instance), means you can pretty much rock around in one-pedal mode.
There are drive modes, but they don’t make a huge difference besides sharpening or dulling the throttle response and fiddling with the air-con.
There’s a familiar layout with a familiar dynamic character: the ID Cross feels like a front-wheel-drive hatchback. Despite the 55% front, 45% rear weight distribution, it responds to your inputs like it’s nose-heavy – but it does so in a comforting way.
There’s a sense that everything is happening at the front and the rear wheels are just there so you don’t make a mess of your driveway. There’s a good degree of body roll so it doesn’t feel hunkered down like a hot hatch, but neither is it lollopy.
Efficiency looks promising. On a mixed morning drive, the trip computer showed about 4.5mpkWh – a competitive figure and one that would eclipse what an ID 3 would do, according to VW’s engineers.
It comes with a 52kWh NMC battery with DC charging at up to 105kW. The WLTP forecast pegs it at 436 km (271 miles) and it will do a 10-80% charge in 24 minutes at a rapid charger.
In the future, there will be VW’s Dynamic Chassis Control system, which can continuously adjust the dampers, plus a model with a limited-slip diff borrowed from the Cupra Raval VZ and maybe even a four-wheel-drive variant.
This perhaps smacks of adding complexity for complexity’s sake, when clearly Volkswagen has worked very hard to make something that is relatively simple and really quite good.
The more observant among you might see that this is a camouflaged car – but it is pretty much what the customer will get, save for some finishing touches inside. And I think if I were a customer, I’d be feeling pretty pleased.
