RAY MASSEY: Here's something to get young motorists really inspired to learn to drive - a rakish electric sports car aimed at children aged four to 11
- Firefly Sport is produced by UK-based Young Driver Motor Cars
- Top speed ranges from 7mph for the youngest drivers up to a maximum 25mph
Now here's something to get young motorists really inspired to learn to drive — a rakish electric sports car aimed at children aged four to 11.
Built and sourced entirely in Britain by a UK team of motor industry veterans, this new battery-powered Firefly Sport is produced by UK-based Young Driver Motor Cars — a sister company to Young Driver, the world's largest under-17s driving school.
Firefly Sport will be available for four to ten-year-old drivers at 45 Young Driver training centres across the UK, costing £20 for a 15-minute test drive.
Feeling flush?: The Firefly Sport can be purchased outright for £11,700 each by families who have space for children to drive the car on private land
But if you're feeling flush, they can also be purchased outright for £11,700 each by families who have space for children to drive the car on private land. Top speed ranges from 7mph for the youngest drivers up to a maximum 25mph, youngdriver.com.
The Firefly Sport's body comes from Huddersfield, the chassis from Coventry, two cleverly packaged and recyclable 12-volt batteries from Bromsgrove near Birmingham, and twin 24-volt electric motors from Bournemouth.
Built on an aluminium chassis the 2.1 metre-long car is engineered and built by a team of British motor industry veterans who have worked for firms including Aston Martin, Jaguar Land Rover, BMW and MG.
The new battery-powered Firefly Sport is produced by UK-based Young Driver Motor Cars
Firefly Sport will be available for four to ten-year-old drivers at 45 Young Driver training centres across the UK, costing £20 for a 15-minute test drive
Top speed ranges from 7mph for the youngest drivers up to a maximum 25mph
The car is engineered and built by a team of British motor industry veterans who have worked for firms including Aston Martin, Jaguar Land Rover, BMW and MG
It also has a remote cut-off facility with a 200-metre range, as well as an automatic cut-off if it senses obstacles in its path, making it ultra-safe for first-time drivers.
The car can be specified in a wide range of colours and options. It can also be re-charged using solar power. Its battery cells are bolted in, making them easy to remove and recycle.
Managing director Ian Mulingani said: 'Firefly Sport is a fully-fledged, scaled-down motor car. It will allow 4- to 10-year-olds the chance to get behind the wheel and have an authentic motoring experience.'
He said: 'Its sophisticated design and componentry fundamentally mirror the way a road car behaves, but at fully manageable speeds.
'Being electric and looking like a junior supercar, it also aligns with the type of vehicle that children see themselves driving when they pass their test.
'And it's precisely this kind of engagement we need at our Young Driver training centres to start them on a journey towards improved road safety – and ultimately, preventing unnecessary road deaths'.
Alpine Alpenglow catches the eye
Some of the most fun I've had behind the wheel of a two-seater sports car was in the new generation Alpine revived by parent company Renault.
I was at the launch of the reborn marque in Monte Carlo in February 2016 and for the first test drives in the South of France. What a hoot.
What a hoot: The Alpine range costs from £49,990 for the standard 252hp A110 to £59,440 for the GT and £60,940 for the S version
At the Paris Motor Show this week, a concept electric supercar called Alpine Alpenglow caught my eye — and that of French President Emmanuel Macron who was photographed with it.
Its styling is 'the starting point for all future Alpine designs, technologies and breakthroughs'.
Its styling is 'the starting point for all future Alpine designs, technologies and breakthroughs'
The Alpine range costs from £49,990 for the standard 252hp A110 to £59,440 for the GT and £60,940 for the S version
Also on show was a 'radical' and more powerful A110 R with 300hp and rest to 62mph in 3.9seconds.
The Alpine range costs from £49,990 for the standard 252hp A110 to £59,440 for the GT and £60,940 for the S version, alpine-cars.co.uk.
Most watched Money videos
- Blue Whale manager: Where I'm investing for growth now
- How to beat inheritance tax: SIMON LAMBERT
- Mercedes-Benz unveils its super-luxurious electric vans
- Edinburgh Worldwide: The rationale for the tender offer
- Changan Deepal S05: Can this electric SUV entice buyers?
- DS Automobiles show off their new flagship car - the DS No8
- MG's two new cheap EV hatchbacks are put to the test
- Could you turn £500 into £10,000?
- How to turn £2 into £10,000 with micro investing
- What investors need to know about gold, metals and miners
- BMW introduces new AI humanoid robots at its Leipzig factory
- The new BMW iX3 has set the worlds first 500 mile range EV
-
Lloyds Bank reveals banking glitch hit almost half a...
-
More than 100,000 Volkswagen EVs recalled worldwide over...
-
What caused the NS&I £476m missing savings debacle and...
-
Labour is 'letting down a generation of kids' as youth...
-
Beat Billmageddon: From council tax to broadband, costs...
-
Jaguar Land Rover halts production at its biggest car...
-
Chief economist Andy Haldane urges Bank of England to...
-
Big blow to national saving: Scandal at NS&I threatens a...
-
Asda boss admits 'plenty to do' in turnaround - and...
-
Just Eat and Autotrader investigated as CMA launches fake...
-
Retail sales fell before the Iran war as consumer...
-
Household confidence rocked by 'ripple of fear' spread by...
-
Middle East conflict will push up prices on the High...
-
Co-op chief quits after being accused of presiding over a...
-
SMALL CAP MOVERS: Quadrise lights up a gloomy week for...
-
Last chance to BEAT broadband price hikes: You can still...
-
ALEX BRUMMER: The humiliation of the tech titans is...
-
Run the country like a business and put the 'great' back...





