Currently reading: Lamborghini EVs to be tuned for pace and emotional appeal

Future electric cars will stay true to core customer ethos and have "incredible" power-to-weight ratios

Lamborghini is well under way with the research and development programme for its first electric sports cars, which the firm says will tout blistering on-paper performance figures but put dynamic engagement and emotional appeal first.

The Sant’Agata firm revealed the Lanzador concept last year as a vision of its first production electric car, which is due on sale around 2028 as a high-riding four-door GT car with more than 1000bhp.

Details of electric successors to Lamborghini’s more traditional supercars remain under wraps, but CEO Stephan Winkelmann says no electric Lamborghini will rely exclusively on lofty power and performance figures as a means of differentiation.

He revealed that Lamborghini engineers “are testing a lot of electric cars” as part of the EV development process and hailed encouraging signs that the driving experience is not necessarily ubiquitous.

Lamborghini Revuelto front three quarter

“We see that there are a lot of differences, which is a good sign,” he said. “It means that you can adapt electric cars to the needs of the brand.”

Winkelmann added that while an electric Lamborghini will inherently pack more power and accelerate quicker than any model that has gone before, the priority for the company is making sure it can provide a truly unique driving experience that emphasises the emotional appeal of its cars.

“The fact of the numbers is important,” he said. “For power output, we are talking about at least one megawatt [1341bhp]. This is for sure. This is one of the pillars of measurement for the performance of tomorrow when it comes to full electric.”

But Winkelmann added: “Much more important than these facts and figures for Lamborghini is how you feel in the car. Performance is divided into two. One part is acceleration, top speed, lap time and braking behaviour.

Lamborghini Lanzador front

Back to top

But this has to be translated into an emotional side and every customer who drives a Lamborghini acknowledges that there is this emotional part of a Lamborghini – and this has to be translated in electric cars.”

Winkelmann suggested electric Lamborghinis will have an “incredible” power-to-weight ratio but acknowledged that “the weight is going to be much higher than today”.

That is why the firm is exploring “what we can achieve with software” and emerging powertrain technologies as a means of enhancing dynamic appeal. He has outlined a stringent and intimidating brief for Lamborghini’s first electric powertrains.

“The engineers always put their hands on their head when I talk about this: the combination of repeated acceleration, top speed and range,” he said. “It is almost ‘mission impossible’ to have this on the highest level in every sense.”

Lamborghini engineers are “working hard” to achieve this balance, said Winkelmann, and while prototype testing is not yet under way, “we know what is going to be the contents of the car. We’re very confident to be persuasive on this type of car.”

Felix Page

Felix Page
Title: Deputy editor

Felix is Autocar's deputy editor, responsible for leading the brand's agenda-shaping coverage across all facets of the global automotive industry - both in print and online.

He has interviewed the most powerful and widely respected people in motoring, covered the reveals and launches of today's most important cars, and broken some of the biggest automotive stories of the last few years. 

Join the debate

Comments
5
Add a comment…
Speedraser 6 February 2024

This is supposed to sound reassuring. It doesn't. It's actually very distressing. None of this makes me look forward to EV Lambos, or EV generally. Winkelmann says it won't be just about the numbers -- there will be emotion, really there will -- but then talks all about the numbers and how important they will be. We really need vastly more performance than we have now??? Where can one get anywhere near experiencing the performance that current fast cars offer? Certainly not on a road. Even on a track, how many owners are capable of really driving the current range of "merely" 700 and 800 hp cars? Or 600 for that matter? We should look forward to at least 1350 hp? For what? And with huge weight gains. I'm sure they'll be fun to drive near their outrgeous limits (again, where and when can you do this?), but at fast road speeds? There is no chance that these cars will be anywhere near as fun to drive on the road as the cars I have now -- that have "just" 420-520 hp. And have a real voice. And this is supposed to be good for the environment? Sure it is. Huge batteries, huge e-motors, huge everything to deal with the weights and forces involved, huge amounts of environmentally UNfriendly production to make them.

Andrew1 7 February 2024

Oh, please, it's a Lambo, they're not supposed to be friendly with the environment. For that you can get a super efficient Zoe.

Speedraser 7 February 2024

It's not possible to more completely miss my point.

Peter Cavellini 6 February 2024

It wasn't so long ago that the one essential thing was how long the Tyres lasted at sustained high speeds, the Veyron for instance had Tyres rated to only 237mph, they also cost £20,000 at set! and, if I remember correctly, changed every 5,000 miles!, how are Lamborghini and other brands dealing with Tyre issues?, Cars can only go so fast, there comes a limit to what a human can cope with and I d assume you'd have to reasonably healthy to deal with the G forces , suspension development, how does that cope with the power and torque?. I know this sounds cynical , and I know it's fun to see these cars going down long long runways as fast as they can go, but usually you see them somewhere like Monaco or Saudi Arabia or on YouTube being bumped or badly parked, question, does any of the tech get passed down the car chain?

TStag 6 February 2024

Somehow the more I hear car makers talk about how they can differentiate electric cars the less believable it seems.