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Where I go, Yo-Go: exploring London in an electric golf buggy


The brains behind the Yo-Go buggies is Samuel Bailey. The automotive engineer wanted to give Londoners an alternative to the expensive electric car and found the answer in China, where the buggies are built by a company called Marshell.

Each has a small 5kWh battery powering a 4kW electric motor and giving a range of 30 miles. Charging is via London’s lamp-post network or a roof-mounted solar panel, which, after a day’s sunshine, can provide a six-mile top-up.

However, for all its clever electronics, a Yo-Go buggy is still a golf cart, right? In fact, the vehicle is homologated for UK roads, so it’s now classified as an L6e quadricycle. Its body has been redesigned, too, to make it more practical and weatherproof.

Even so, my fear of being the laughing stock of the capital’s road users is not helped by the sight of my test buggy awaiting me at Yo-Go’s Parsons Green parking spot. The small vehicle looks only a couple of rungs up the evolutionary ladder from the rickshaws that clog London’s West End.

And what city needs yet another electric ‘personal mobility’ solution? My scepticism isn’t helped by the buggy’s questionable weather protection, its basic plastic interior (although the two seats look comfortable) and its twin rear-mounted boots, which can’t be locked.

At least the foot pedals marked ‘Stop’ and ‘Go’ appear to be foolproof and, save for indicators and a windscreen wiper, there are few extras to distract the inexperienced driver. Driving the buggy is just a case of ‘unlocking’ it, belting up, selecting D for drive and pressing the Go pedal.

Thanks to its low weight, the buggy surges forward effortlessly; helped by fairly aggressive brake regen, it stops easily too. Independent front suspension absorbs the worst of the area’s battered roads, and although the buggy is narrow, its track is just wide enough to clear speed cushions.

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