This week, Cropley gets up close and personal with Fiat's 500e, is refreshed by an old car event that doesn't shove aside all your other weekend commitments and feels a bolt of joy at the acquisition by Gridserve of Ecotricity's Electric Highway.

Monday

Electrified week. I spent a fascinating few days with Fiat’s 500e, a car I tried in left-hand-drive form months ago but have been itching to assess in the real world ever since. Why real world? Because no matter how many left-handed miles you do on the rutted, high-crowned roads of Britain, you can’t form an accurate idea of a car’s ride quality while bumping along in the gutter.

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At first, the 500e seems bigger than its petrol Fiat 500 sibling, but there are only a couple of centimetres in it. (We measured.) Striking impressions are of a familiar design cleverly progressed, and a heartening improvement in materials and assembly quality. A week is enough time to show how quickly you stop missing a conventional drivetrain, too. For me, the 500e’s quick and precise departure from rest is full compensation for the lack of clutch bite and an H-pattern. In fact, I liked everything about the 500e except its range, which is plenty for a city car (Fiat’s description) but marginal for me. Give it the Renault Zoe’s 240 miles and I’m on the hook.