AutoVehicle TechHere’s why Mini Aceman EV has projectors beaming onto its dashboardThe electric concept is expected to go into production in 2024When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
AutoVehicle TechHere’s why Mini Aceman EV has projectors beaming onto its dashboardThe electric concept is expected to go into production in 2024When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
The electric concept is expected to go into production in 2024
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: Mini)
(Image credit: Mini)
Mini has revealed a new electric concept car, called the Aceman. On the outside it’s a four-door crossover aimed at the urban market and to slot between the Mini hatchback and a new, larger Countryman due out in the future.
(Image credit: Mini)
(Image credit: Mini)
Save for a bank of physical dials and toggle switches beneath the display, the rest of the dashboard is blank. Until the car is turned on, and a pair of projectors in the roof lining beam down onto the fabric-covered dashboard. Although undoubtedly a concept car novelty (at least for now), the projectors are surprisingly well-integrated, just behind the windscreen where they can’t dazzle or distract the driver or pedestrians.
The idea is, these project colours and patterns onto the dashboard in a bid to complement the ambient LED lighting found elsewhere. But beyond this, Mini also sees a future where the projections could be used to enhance the infotainment system, perhaps with mapping and other interface elements shown right across the dashboard.
Although unlikely to appear on the production version of the Aceman when it arrives in 2024, Mini has put some serious thought into how the system would work, and why it chose projectors instead of adding more displaying and lighting modules to the dashboard itself.
(Image credit: Mini)
(Image credit: Mini)
This choice is to do with homologation and crash safety, Mini says, with projectors in the roof lining a safer option than harder, less forgiving displays and lighting modules in the dashboard.
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The Aceman has a leather-free interior, and also does away with chrome too. The dashboard is made from a knitted and recycled textile, while the steering wheel and interior door handles are laminated with a dark green velvet velour that makes for a more interesting look and feel than conventional leather, real or otherwise.
On the outside, the Aceman concept is fitted with front and rear lights packed full of LEDs capable of playing various sequences and patterns. Although the front lights are purely for the concept car, Mini hopes the rear units can be homologated for road use, where personalised patterns could be illuminated when the car is locked and unlocked.
(Image credit: Mini)
(Image credit: Mini)
Mini intends to put the Aceman into production in 2024. It will be the same length as this concept, at about 4.05 metres, but won’t be as wide as the car seen here, which sits at a squat 1.99m. The car will fit into Mini’s range above the three-door hatchback and below a next-generation electric Countryman that will be larger than the current model. The Aceman will use the same platform as the next-generation electric three-door, which is expected to have a range of between 200 and 250 miles, and a power output of up to 160kW.
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