Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
ALL-ELECTRIC ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE UNDERGOING SECOND TESTING PHASE ON THE FRENCH RIVIERA
Thu Jul 28 13:59:00 CEST 2022 Press Release
Over the past months, the marque’s test and development engineers have shifted their focus from the extreme conditions of Arjeplog, Sweden, to more formal scrutiny in a location that reflects the Spectre's everyday use: the French Riviera.
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Georgina Cox
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
This article in other PressClubs
- Rolls-Royce continues 2.5 million km testing programme for first electric product, Spectre
- 625,000 km testing phase in French Riviera region of southern France
- Spectre tested at Autodrome de Miramas facility and on Côte d’Azur roads
- Unprecedented processing speeds leveraged for new standard in ride
- Proprietary smart suspension system confirmed for production
- Developments in marque’s architecture make Spectre stiffest Rolls-Royce ever
- 30% increase in rigidity enabled by integrating battery pack into structure
- New drag coefficient of 0.25 makes Spectre most aerodynamic Rolls-Royce yet
- Spectre development now approximately 40% complete
“It is no exaggeration to state that Spectre is the most
anticipated Rolls-Royce ever. Free from the restrictions connected
to the internal combustion engine, our battery-electric vehicle will
offer the purest expression of the Rolls-Royce experience in the
marque’s 118-year history. This latest testing phase proves a suite
of advanced technologies that underpin a symbolic shift for
Rolls-Royce as it progresses towards a bright, bold, all-electric
future. This will secure the ongoing relevance of our brand for
generations to come.”
Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce
Motor Cars
“Spectre unlocks the extraordinary potential of integrating a
fully electric powertrain into our Architecture of Luxury platform.
From this engineering starting point, our testing and refinement
processes combine empirical data and human experience, intuition and
insights acquired over more than a century to refine the motor car’s
driving dynamics and character. In coordinating this orchestra of
systems with precisely defined responses to driver inputs and road
conditions, made possible by the latest software and hardware
developments, Spectre delivers the Rolls-Royce experience in
exceptionally high definition.”
Dr. Mihiar Ayoubi, Director of Engineering, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE: BACKGROUND
Whilst Rolls-Royce has built a reputation for
creating the pinnacle of super-luxury motor cars using internal
combustion engines, the concept of electrification is long familiar to
the brand. Henry Royce began his working life as an electrical
engineer and dedicated much of his career to creating internal
combustion engines that simulated the characteristics of an electric
car – silent running, instant torque and the sensation of one endless gear.
Yet the connection with the marque’s founders is far deeper.
When Charles Rolls drove a 1900 electric car named the Columbia, he
made a prophecy: “The electric car is perfectly noiseless and clean.
There is no smell or vibration. They should become very useful when
fixed charging stations can be arranged.” Spectre is the fulfilment of
this prophecy.
Spectre also represents a promise kept. In 2011, Rolls-Royce
showcased a fully electric Experimental Phantom concept named 102EX.
This was followed by 103EX, a dramatic design study that anticipated a
bold electric future for the marque. These experimental cars prompted
significant interest from Rolls-Royce clients, who felt that the
characteristics of an electric powertrain would fit perfectly with the
brand. Rolls-Royce Chief Executive Officer, Torsten Müller-Ötvös,
responded to this with a clear promise: Rolls-Royce will go electric,
starting this decade, and by 2030 Rolls-Royce will be a fully electric
motor car brand.
In September 2021, Rolls-Royce confirmed that it had commenced
testing of the first all-electric Rolls-Royce, Spectre. To ensure
Spectre is first and foremost a Rolls-Royce, it will undergo the most
demanding testing programme ever conceived by the marque, spanning 2.5
million kilometres, simulating on average more than 400 years of use
for a Rolls-Royce. It is an extraordinary undertaking.
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE: RIVIERA TESTING
Earlier this year, at a bespoke testing facility in
Arjeplog, Sweden – just 55 kilometres from the Arctic Circle – Spectre
received the first ‘lessons’ in a finishing school that is custom
designed to teach the motor car how to behave and react like a
Rolls-Royce. Over the past months, the marque’s test and development
engineers have shifted their focus from extreme conditions to more
formal scrutiny in a location that reflects the motor car’s everyday
use: the French Riviera.
In evoking its spiritual successor, the Phantom Coupé, this
Electric Super Coupé will be the first all-electric super-luxury motor
car with continental touring central to its proposition. The French
Riviera and its roads present a perfect combination of the types of
conditions that will be demanded from Spectre’s clients, ranging from
technical coastal corniches to faster inland carriageways.
Forming a crucial part of Spectre's 2.5 million kilometre global
testing programme, a total of 625,000 kilometres will be driven on and
around the French Côte d’Azur. This phase is split into two parts,
beginning at the historic Autodrome de Miramas proving ground, located
in the French department of Bouches-du-Rhône in Provence. Once a
circuit that played host to the 1926 Grand Prix, the site is now a
state-of-the-art test and development facility, incorporating more
than 60 kilometres of closed routes and 20 test track environments
that provide a vast number of testing opportunities over its 1,198
acre footprint.
These include irrigation units that create standing water,
demanding handling circuits with tight corners and adverse cambers, as
well as a heavily banked 3.1 mile three-lane high-speed bowl, enabling
Spectre to be tested at continuous high speeds.
The second phase of testing in the region occurs in the
Provençal countryside surrounding the Autodrome de Miramas. This
region is enjoyed by many of the marque’s clients, therefore a
significant 55%of testing here has taken place on the very roads that
many production Spectres will be driven on following first customer
deliveries in the fourth quarter of 2023. This provision for testing
under local, real-life conditions is repeated in key markets around
the world, as the marque goes to painstaking lengths to ensure that
its products meet – and so often exceed – the expectations of its
highly discerning customer group.
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE: A BESPOKE ELECTRONIC ARCHITECTURE
Spectre is unlike any Rolls-Royce before it. This is
not only because of its fully electric powertrain, but also its
unprecedented computing power and application of advanced
data-processing technologies. Spectre is the most connected
Rolls-Royce ever and each of its components are more intelligent than
in any previous Rolls-Royce. It features 141,200 sender-receiver
relations and has more than 1,000 functions and more than 25,000 sub
functions. This is around three times more sender-receiver signals
than a typical Rolls-Royce.
The dramatically increased intelligence of Spectre’s electronic
and electric powertrain architecture enables a free and direct
exchange of detailed information between these functions with minimal
centralised processing. To unlock the potential of this technology,
Rolls-Royce software engineering specialists developed a decentralised
intelligence for Spectre. This is based on data being processed closer
to its source rather than being handled in its entirety by a single
central processing unit.
By sending more sophisticated data packets – that not only
describe a variable but propose a response – the motor car’s reaction
time is significantly faster and more detailed. This advanced
technology sees much of the development of Spectre pivot from the
workshop into the digital space.
Yet developing Spectre is not an exercise in computer science
alone. The motor car requires a response to hundreds of thousands of
possible scenarios, and therefore it needs the most skilled and
experienced specialists to define and finesse an appropriate
mechanical reaction. Over the course of the Riviera Testing Programme,
the marque’s most experienced engineers are painstakingly creating a
dedicated control for each of Spectre’s 25,000-plus functions,
incorporating variations of response depending on factors including
weather, driver behaviour, vehicle status and road conditions.
In harnessing this new processing power, the marque’s engineers
are creating unparalleled levels of detail, refinement and
effortlessness for Spectre whilst ensuring continuity in the
experience of Rolls-Royce’s internal combustion engine motor cars.
These highly experienced specialists describe the result as
“Rolls-Royce in high definition”.
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE: ‘MAGIC CARPET RIDE’ IN HIGH DEFINITION
Following months of continual testing, a new
suspension technology has been approved that ensures Spectre delivers
Rolls-Royce’s hallmark ‘magic carpet ride’. This technology is now
being refined and perfected at Miramas and on the roads of the French Riviera.
Using a suite of new hardware components and leveraging
Spectre’s high-speed processing capabilities, this sophisticated
electronic roll stabilisation system uses data from the motor car’s
Flagbearer system, which reads the road surface ahead, and satellite
navigation system, which alerts Spectre to upcoming corners.
On straight roads, the system can automatically decouple
Spectre’s anti-roll bars, allowing each wheel to act independently.
This prevents the rocking motion that occurs when one side of a
vehicle hits an undulation in the road. This also dramatically
improves high-frequency imperfections in ride caused by smaller, more
frequent shortcomings in road surface quality.
Once a corner is confirmed as imminent by satellite navigation
data and the Flagbearer system, the components are recoupled, the
suspension dampers stiffen and the four-wheel steering system prepares
for activation to ensure effortless entry and exit. Under cornering,
more than 18 sensors are monitored, and steering, braking, power
delivery and suspension parameters are adjusted accordingly so that
Spectre remains stable. For the driver, this delivers serenity,
predictability and, ultimately, greater control in unprecedented high definition.
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE: INTELLIGENT ARCHITECTURE PROVIDES
UNPARALLELED RIGIDITY
The unparalleled control of such a generously
proportioned motor car that is provided by this new technology is
enabled by the marque’s all-aluminium spaceframe architecture. Not
only has this platform, which is reserved for the brand’s exclusive
use, enabled designers to create a new class of Rolls-Royce – the
Electric Super Coupé – but it has also provided Spectre with the most
rigid body in the marque’s history.
Spectre’s aluminium architecture is reinforced with steel
sections that provide exceptional torsional rigidity. This is combined
with aluminium body sections that represent the largest of any
Rolls-Royce yet. The one-piece side panel, which extends from the
front of the A-pillar to behind the rear tail-lights, is the largest
‘deep draw’ part ever produced by Rolls-Royce – extending nearly four
metres in length. Likewise, the pillarless coach doors, which are
nearly 1.5 metres in length, are the longest in Rolls-Royce history.
Spectre’s exceptional rigidity, which represents a 30%
improvement over all existing Rolls-Royce motor cars, has also been
achieved by integrating the extremely rigid structure of the battery
itself into Spectre’s aluminium spaceframe architecture. Only through
the marque’s architecture has this been made possible.
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE: A NEW AERODYNAMIC STANDARD
In announcing the redesigned Spirit of Ecstasy mascot
that will sit proudly at the prow of Spectre, Rolls-Royce
aerodynamicists predicted that the motor car would have a drag
coefficient (cd) of just 0.26, making it the most
aerodynamic Rolls-Royce ever created. The dramatic design of this
landmark motor car, which itself is only possible using the marque’s
spaceframe architecture, has enabled engineers to further improve on
this landmark figure.
Following rigorous wind tunnel testing, digital modelling and
continuous high-speed testing in Miramas, this figure has been further
reduced to just 0.25. This does not just represent a record in the
context of Rolls-Royce, but is unprecedented in the luxury sector.
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE: THE EXTRAORDINARY UNDERTAKING CONTINUES
The Spectre global testing programme continues: the
Electric Super Coupé will still be tested for a further one million
kilometres before the marque’s engineers will consider this
undertaking complete. First customer deliveries of Spectre will
commence in the fourth quarter of 2023.
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