Aston Martin has announced it will begin development of its first all-electric production car, the Rapide E.
Limited in production to 155 units, the car will have an 800V battery with 65kWh capacity, using lithium-ion cells mounted to where the original 12-cylinder Rapide engine and gearbox were located. The battery system powers two rear-mounted electric motors that make the equivalent of 602bhp and 700 pound-feet of instant torque.
It will be the most powerful Rapide sedan available.
Rapide E joins a slew of new conceptual and production all-electric luxury vehicles announced, including the Jaguar I-Pace, Mercedes-Benz EQ, the Audi E-Tron, and the Porsche Taycan. BMW has announced an upcoming iVision Next all-electric vehicle, debuting on Saturday; Pininfarina has announced an entire line of electric hypercars arriving in 2020.
They are all gunning for the precedent Tesla set when it developed the all-electric (and good-looking) Model S sedan that has cornered the electric luxury car market for years.
“The term ‘Tesla killer’ is a little over-used and dramatic, but these are certainly strong Tesla competitors,” is how Rebecca Lindland, the executive analyst for Kelley Blue Book and Cox Automotive, puts it. “And in this group, range and performance like this is a really strong selling point.”
Aston developed the Rapide E with Williams Advanced Engineering, the technology and engineering services business of the Williams Group. Its goal: orientate the otherwise-handsome sedan better toward driving performance. It has newly designed aerodynamic wheels, new Pirelli P-Zero tyres, lowered body roll, refined rear-wheel-drive and reduced cavity noise. It has a top speed of 250km/h and a 0-100km/h sprint time of just over three seconds.
Lagonda
More importantly, said Aston Martin CEO Andy Palmer in a statement, the car will be especially beneficial as a first step toward relaunching the Lagonda brand, which will be a zero-emission marque when it begins production in 2021.
The first Lagonda Vision Concepts are expected to get 640km on one charge — more than enough to drive from Johannesburg to Durban in one sitting — and have self-driving capability and zero emissions.
“It’s meant to feel like moving up to the Concorde from first class,” Palmer said during the last Geneva Motor Show.
Deliveries of the Rapide E will start by the end of 2019. — Reported by Hannah Elliott, (c) 2018 Bloomberg LP