I'd like to see a night drive, especially how the headlights perform. Does it have good illumination, cornering lights, adaptive lights, matrix? I checked out the Kia EV6 but the headlights are not very good and I wonder how the Han performs in comparison - sadly I find no info on this aspect on youtube.
@@adha2913 Thank you for this suggestion! It has good illumination, but doesn’t have adaptive lights for corners. Perhaps I can do one of this videos in the near future. Anyhow, thank you for your idea and support!
@@maxtar6406 Indeed! It’s almost like the same thing as the Seal. But unofficially, Seal is aimed at export while Han is aimed for domestic consumption. That said, Han looks way more sick. It’s widely available in China as a Didi (Chinese Uber) premium car.
@@benjamindas0440 Yes, you’re correct. Some cars do have better voice control in both English and Chinese as they have in built GPT to respond. BYD’s voice control happen to be on the basic side.
I dont think Han is categorize as luxury sedan in china market. The price start at 160krmb which is about 22.5k usd only, normally car that start above 200k+ only consider as luxury.
@@nagi-springfield93 Thank you for sharing your thoughts. To understand the perspective of Chinese market and the definition of luxury cars, one might need to understand the demographics of China. This country has 1.4 billion people in population, which is two times the population of Europe. Although the rest of the world might think that it is filled with crazy rich Asians, this is still a small percentage of the population. A huge population has a relatively low income. Hence, the benchmark of the perception of luxury cars are very different in China. At this price point, people who can afford this car are pretty comfortable with their lives (certainly not wealthy). Cars that are above 200k USD are considered ultra luxury. To give you a perspective, an average traffic fine here costs about 200RMB (roughly 28USD). For foreigners in developed countries, they might think that it is no different from a slap on the wrist. For an average local, it could have been a significant part of their monthly earnings. If one can afford a car that is USD22,500 in China, they have already surpassed a significant percentage of their countrymen.
@@Chinesecarguy in 2023 the total china car sales between 110k-200k is around 47%. For 200k above there are about 37% overall total sales. If you consider a 160krmb car as a luxury car then there would be over 50% car sold in china categorize under luxury car which sound very preposterous to me. In china people always categorize car price that above 200k as premium car. Above 400k as premium luxury car which is where the bmw/benz/audi 56E price tag sell at. The total sales for 300k above price is around 15% which is what I imagine a luxury car should be tag as around this ratio. A luxury car should be consider around the top 20-30% sales, surely not around 50%
I would 100% sure Byd Han is not china's most luxurious electric sedan as the model is use to compete against 34c, which is a lower end model for the benz/bmw/audi. Z9gt which sold at around 330k-410k, categorize in top 15% total car sales section, directly compete against 56E is what I would consider as a luxurious product.
@@Chinesecarguy Bruh Im not blind..... "In this video, we take a closer look at the BYD Han, one of China’s most luxurious electric sedans." You literally wrote it yourself in your description
@@Chinesecarguyc'mon man...what nonsense u talking....u closing the cap with small push. Now u want someone to carry u and seat u inside car.....funny Chinese boy 🤦♂️
I'd like to see a night drive, especially how the headlights perform. Does it have good illumination, cornering lights, adaptive lights, matrix? I checked out the Kia EV6 but the headlights are not very good and I wonder how the Han performs in comparison - sadly I find no info on this aspect on youtube.
@@adha2913 Thank you for this suggestion! It has good illumination, but doesn’t have adaptive lights for corners. Perhaps I can do one of this videos in the near future. Anyhow, thank you for your idea and support!
Hatchback on this car would be awesome or even an SUV. EU is so done when this kind of cars comes here
@@catha86 Hundred percent! Actually, BYD has a few SUV that is really sick as well. It’s remarkable how far they’ve come.
Awesome car, it's an upgrade of the Seal.
@@maxtar6406 Indeed! It’s almost like the same thing as the Seal. But unofficially, Seal is aimed at export while Han is aimed for domestic consumption. That said, Han looks way more sick. It’s widely available in China as a Didi (Chinese Uber) premium car.
Wonderful n amazing
@@KashmirParadise786 Thank you for your support!
Would you buy this car? Please let me know👇🏻👇🏻👇🏻
I hope i can afford. I would without a second thought 😊
@@jameel3031 🔥👍🏻
Not buy it for money, this is offered in Europe.
I want china original price 😂
@@antoninsebera152 Hahaha! Hundred percent. The tariffs are in the way big time.
The voice control is so good in Chinese market...when it comes to English it's still hit or miss.
@@benjamindas0440 Yes, you’re correct. Some cars do have better voice control in both English and Chinese as they have in built GPT to respond. BYD’s voice control happen to be on the basic side.
where is the 2000km model?
I dont think Han is categorize as luxury sedan in china market. The price start at 160krmb which is about 22.5k usd only, normally car that start above 200k+ only consider as luxury.
@@nagi-springfield93 Thank you for sharing your thoughts.
To understand the perspective of Chinese market and the definition of luxury cars, one might need to understand the demographics of China. This country has 1.4 billion people in population, which is two times the population of Europe. Although the rest of the world might think that it is filled with crazy rich Asians, this is still a small percentage of the population. A huge population has a relatively low income.
Hence, the benchmark of the perception of luxury cars are very different in China. At this price point, people who can afford this car are pretty comfortable with their lives (certainly not wealthy). Cars that are above 200k USD are considered ultra luxury.
To give you a perspective, an average traffic fine here costs about 200RMB (roughly 28USD). For foreigners in developed countries, they might think that it is no different from a slap on the wrist. For an average local, it could have been a significant part of their monthly earnings.
If one can afford a car that is USD22,500 in China, they have already surpassed a significant percentage of their countrymen.
@@Chinesecarguy in 2023 the total china car sales between 110k-200k is around 47%. For 200k above there are about 37% overall total sales.
If you consider a 160krmb car as a luxury car then there would be over 50% car sold in china categorize under luxury car which sound very preposterous to me.
In china people always categorize car price that above 200k as premium car. Above 400k as premium luxury car which is where the bmw/benz/audi 56E price tag sell at.
The total sales for 300k above price is around 15% which is what I imagine a luxury car should be tag as around this ratio. A luxury car should be consider around the top 20-30% sales, surely not around 50%
I would 100% sure Byd Han is not china's most luxurious electric sedan as the model is use to compete against 34c, which is a lower end model for the benz/bmw/audi.
Z9gt which sold at around 330k-410k, categorize in top 15% total car sales section, directly compete against 56E is what I would consider as a luxurious product.
@@nagi-springfield93 Since when did anybody said that this is China‘s most luxurious EV?
@@Chinesecarguy Bruh Im not blind..... "In this video, we take a closer look at the BYD Han, one of China’s most luxurious electric sedans." You literally wrote it yourself in your description
Is it the end of the world if you have to use your hand to close the cap????? I mean come on such a petty thing.
@@liverpool-rn5ox Thanks for your comment. Using my hand to close the gap is completely fine, it’s just not common among luxury Chinese cars.
@@Chinesecarguyc'mon man...what nonsense u talking....u closing the cap with small push. Now u want someone to carry u and seat u inside car.....funny Chinese boy 🤦♂️
Drop the build your dreams lettering
No. Instead build on your name and let people recognize what a quality product you actually are. And they are doing so too