
While  techies and sci-fi fans (yours truly included) may pine away for flying  cars and the like, we’re not a major car-shopping demographic. As the  recent firestorm surrounding the Chevrolet Volt demonstrated, your  average consumers are interested in how comparable electric vehicles are  to the gasoline-powered cars they already own. Because let’s be honest,  buying an electric car requires a lifestyle change, with things like  recharging, range, and maintenance. After 100-plus years of automobiles,  we’re all very comfortable with the gasoline routine, and EVs represent  a major departure from the familiar.

But  they don’t have to, and that is the single most remarkable thing about  the 2011 Nissan Leaf: It’s mostly unremarkable as a “Car of the Future.”  And while that may seem like damning it with faint praise, it’s really  the highest praise this car can be given. Nissan could’ve built a car  that looked like it belonged in Star Wars, and four people would’ve  bought it. Instead, it’s built a car that’s just different enough to  stand out, but not enough to alienate potential buyers. As unfamiliar as  the concept of a non-gasoline car may be to Joe Customer, the car  itself is surprisingly familiar.

To  make the point, Nissan invited us to drive the car in the towns and  farms surrounding its Franklin, Tennessee, headquarters, and this time  it would be a real drive. No more “take it around the block” quick  tests. I strapped into a production-spec Leaf with a full battery and a  guidebook that, after two driving loops, would take us on a 50-mile tour  of central Tennessee. Time to find out what the Leaf is like in the  real world…

At  the risk of repeating myself, the Leaf proved to be quite ordinary.  After 10 minutes of driving, the car felt completely normal, not unlike  any other four-cylinder hatchback on the road. As amazing as that is,  the lack of a learning curve was just as impressive. Sure, the  touchiness of the regenerative brakes takes a bit of right-foot  recalibration, and the silky smooth acceleration is something you won’t  find in any gasoline-powered car short of a Rolls-Royce. But these  differences fade quickly as you settle in. No special procedures or  driving techniques are necessary; just drive it like you would any other  car.
 
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