Chevrolet gave the public its first chance to experience the company's upcoming Bolt EV in person at the 2016 Consumer Electronics Show this week.

The compact electric car is expected to have a range of more than 200 miles on a single charge and eventually hit showrooms with a price tag of roughly $30,000 after incentives.

For Chevy, a division of General Motors, the Bolt is supposed to be a game changer. Although Tesla's Model S can achieve a 200 to 300 miles of range on a single charge, even the lowest cost Tesla is two-to-three times the Bolt's projected price tag.

Tesla plans to fix this by bringing the mass-market Model 3 to market by 2017 and sell it for a predicted $35,000. But GM intends to beat them to the punch.

If Chevy can deliver on its promises, the Bolt will eclipse every other electric car in its price range, such as Nissan's Leaf or BMW's i3 in terms of performance-per-dollar.

I got to drive one of the company's advanced pre-production prototypes and my first impressions of the Bolt are very positive. As a pre-production model, the cars are relatively close to what will roll off assembly lines at the end of the year. However, there will also likely be changes to the car to smooth out some of its rough edges.

At first glance, the Bolt is a handsome and practical compact hatchback. In production guise, the Bolt will have a different head and taillight design.

The interior is open and roomy with more than enough space to seat four adults comfortably. Since it's still at the prototype stage, the interior panels were camouflaged with black cloth to hide its appearance until it's production-ready.

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The Bolt features a digital driver's instrument cluster as well as a 10.2-inch touchscreen infotainment system. As with other General Motors cars, the Bolt will feature 4G LTE connectivity and OnStar support, both of which we've been hugely impressed with in other GM vehicles.

To drive, the Bolt felt steady and composed even under hard braking and acceleration. It's steering isn't quite sports-car precise, but more than acceptable for daily driving. As for speed, it is unlikely the hatchback will ever produce Tesla's supercar-shaming acceleration figures.

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However, push the start button, shift the car into drive, stomp on the pedal on the right and the Bolt accelerates smoothly and swiftly — giving the driver the impression that there's plenty go power left in reserve. As with all EV's these days, the electric powertrain offers great torque and even triggered the car's traction control while accelerating out of a couple of corners.

GM has captured considerable attention since it announced the Bolt last year and then moved rapidly into an all-systems-go mode for the car, aiming to get it to market ahead of the Tesla Model 3. But it's not like GM isn't taking on a big risk by going all in on Bolt.

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