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The front and rear suspension of the e-tron GT uses air springs for a smoother, controlled ride than the Polestar 2, which uses coil springs. Air springs maintain proper ride height and ride more smoothly.
The e-tron GT offers an available active suspension system, which counteracts cornering forces actively, limiting body roll and improving handling and stability. Polestar doesn’t offer an active suspension on the Polestar 2.
The e-tron GT has a standard automatic front and rear load leveling suspension to keep ride height level with a heavy load or when towing. The e-tron GT’s height leveling suspension allows the driver to raise ride height for better off-road clearance and then lower it again for easier entering and exiting and better on-road handling. The Polestar 2 doesn’t offer a load leveling suspension.
For a smoother ride and more stable handling, the e-tron GT’s wheelbase is 6.5 inches longer than on the Polestar 2 (114.2 inches vs. 107.7 inches).
For better handling and stability, the track (width between the wheels) on the e-tron GT is 3.9 inches wider in the front and 2.6 inches wider in the rear than on the Polestar 2.
The RS e-tron GT performance handles at .95 G’s, while the Polestar 2 Single Motor pulls only .85 G’s of cornering force in a Motor Trend skidpad test.
The RS e-tron GT performance executes Motor Trend’s “Figure Eight” maneuver 2.2 seconds quicker than the Polestar 2 Single Motor (24.1 seconds @ .85 average G’s vs. 26.3 seconds @ .68 average G’s).