On a recent trip to Paris, we needed to get from the City of Light to the Pop Culture Museum about 30 minutes away. Scrolling the transportation options, we discovered a Budget rental car location in the city offering a Lynk & Co Co 01 plug-in hybrid crossover. We don’t write much about Lynk & Co anymore, I’d forgotten about them until I kept seeing the shapely, full-figured Co 1 driving around Paris.
The backstory: Geely completed its purchase of Volvo in 2010, then created Lynk & Co in 2017 to fill the MSRP gap in China between Volvos and Geely-br anded cars. Lynk & Co adopted names similar to Polestar, with the Co 01
We’ve been hearing about Chinese automakers launching operations in Western markets for more than a decade. That’s surge has begun to take off with electric cars in Europe, the Financial Times reporting earlier this year — before the tariff situation escalated — that Chinese brands could account for 25% of Europe’s EV market
The Lynk & Co Co1 PHEV could skirt the political hubbub by being a hybrid. It skirts every other hubbub by being as innocuous as it is pleasant to use for the metropolis commute. We’d call it the automotive equivalent of a brown leather belt; almost no one is going to notice it — not even the wearer — but if they do, the belt is fine enough, it suits its surroundings, and it does its job effortlessly. Lynk & Co’s former European chief, Alain Visser, put it more succinctly when he told a reviewer
The Co 01 sits on the same platform as the XC40 and Polestar 2. Dimensions of 178.8 inches long, 73.1 inches wide and 66.7 inches tall on a 107.6-inch wheelbase make it four inches longer than our XC40 Hybrid but two inches narrower, its roof 1.5 inches higher, its wheelbase an inch longer.
A sufficient amount of power comes from a turbocharged 1.5-liter three-cylinder making 178 horses and 195 pound-feet of torque, helped by an electric motor that can turn out 81 hp and 118 lb-ft. Lynk gives total output at 257 horses and 313 lb-ft, all of it sent to the front axle through a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox. With the help of a 17.6-kWh lithium-ion battery (14.1 kWh usable), the Co 01 can go an estimated 54 miles on the WLTP cycle on pure electric power. When the 11-gallon fuel tank is filled, driving range can reach the far side of 500 kilometers (310 miles).
The Co 01 never feels as potent as the numbers suggest, taking eight seconds to reach 62 miles per hour. The Hyundai Tucson PHEV is within inches of the Lynk’s dimensions and a few pounds of the Lynk’s 4,142-pound curb weight. The Hyundai makes 261 hp and 258 lb-ft, various reviewers getting it to 60 mph in anywhere from 7.1 to 7.6 seconds. That’s not far off the Lynk, but we suspect the Co 01’s power delivery is more nuanced than the spec sheet suggests. Still, the result is reasonable, innocuous acceleration, exactly on brand.