The EV could become the fastest accelerating production car of all time vehicle when it debuts.
First Published - May 2022
Bentley wants its first electric car to make a statement.
We’ll have to wait until 2025 to see the British marque’s debut EV in all its glory, but a new detail has piqued our interest. It seems that the car will be able to bolt from zero to 60 mph in about 1.5 seconds. You read that right: 1.5 seconds.
The astonishing tidbit was casually dropped by Bentley CEO Adrian Hallmark in a recent interview with Automotive News Europe. The exec told the newspaper than the automaker’s upcoming EV, which is still in development, will have a powertrain with twice as much grunt as the twin-turbocharged 6.0-liter W-12 in the performance-focused GT Speed, which is no small feat. The Speed, which is Robb Report‘s 2022 Car of the Year, has a gas-powered mill that generates a robust 650 hp and 664 ft lbs or torque. That means the Bentley EV could produce up to 1,400 hp. That may be why the CEO said the car will be capable of delivering “effortless overtaking performance from a huge amount of torque on demand.”
Thanks to the instantaneous torque delivered by electric powertrains, lightning-quick acceleration times are becoming the norm for performance-oriented EVs. Road & Track points out that last year has seen the debut of two battery-powered cars that can zoom to 60 mph in less than two seconds—the Tesla Model S Plaid (which can accomplish the feat in 1.9 seconds) and the Rimac Nevera (1.85 seconds). Still, 1.5 seconds is unheard of, and if Bentley can deliver on Hallmark’s claim, it would almost certainly make its debut EV the fastest accelerating production car of all time.
There might be some drawbacks to the vehicle’s quickness, though. Ultra-fast acceleration is thrilling the first few times you experience it, but it eventually “just becomes nauseous,” Hallmark told Automotive News Europe. It’s because of this that the marque will allow you to control the EV’s acceleration speed.
“You can have 0-60 mph in 2.7 seconds. Or it can be switched to 1.5 seconds,” he told the publication.
Of course, we’ll have to wait and see just how fast Bentley’s first EV will be, along with how far it can travel on a single charge—and what it will look like. Luckily for Bentley loyalists, it won’t be too long now. The marque plans to start building the electric car at its factory in Crewe, England, in 2025.
Bryan Hood
Senior Staff Writer - Robb Report
Bryan Hood is a digital staff writer at Robb Report. Before joining the magazine, he worked for the New York Post, Artinfo and New York magazine, where he covered everything from celebrity gossip to music to English soccer. His writing has also appeared in publications such as The Guardian, Bloomberg Businessweek and Vice. A native of the Los Angeles suburbs, he briefly worked as a library manager before moving to New York to become a journalist.
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