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Bentley’s First-Ever, Electrical Concept Car Is a Luxury Fever Wish

Bentley’s First-Ever, Electrified Concept Car Is a Luxury Fever Desire

The Bentley Motors EXP twelve 6e concept convertible hybrid automobile is driven onto the stage on the very first day of the 87th Geneva International Motor Showcase in Switzerland.

Photographer: Luke MacGregor/Bloomberg

Albeit most of the notable debuts at the Geneva Motor Showcase are taunted months ahead of time, Bentley came out swinging on Tuesday with a surprise demonstrating of the marque's first-ever, pure-electric concept.

The Bentley EXP twelve Speed 6e Concept is meant to explore the possibility of Bentley producing a true all-electric vehicle for production; it’s a separate endeavor from the recently promised plug-in hybrid Bentayga SUV, which is due out in 2018. If it is received well by VIP guests and analysts at future car circuit stops in Shanghai and Pebble Beach, Calif., said execs, the convertible could lead to an electrified vehicle from Bentley by 2021. (The car, while drivable, is one of one, so in order to prevent harm it will not be available for prospective buyers to drive.)

“This will give us a very good indication of where we are,” Wolfgang Dürheimer, the chairman and chief executive officer of Bentley Motors, said during an interview in Geneva. “Do we need it? Or are we okay to still have combustion engines and hybrids, that’s it? This is what we want to find out.

“We want to send a clear message: ‘If we do it, this is what it would look like.’ EVs don’t necessarily need to look like a refrigerator. They can appeal. They can be sexy. They can be emotional.”

And sexy emotion they have provided in spades. Most notable, at very first glance, is the open-pore leather that covers the cabin and rear bank of the car. The oxblood patina looks so sweet and infrequent, it might as well be tartare; it contrasts beautifully with the stark white exterior. The front bondage mask is split into two air vents and has “crystal cut” round LED headlights and a massive lattice-style Bentley front grille done in silver and fondled copper. When the car starts, a white “6e” symbol illuminates underneath the mesh of the grille.

There’s a general old/fresh mix to the two-seater, Bentley’s head of design, Stefan Sielaff, said of the aesthetic strategy during an interview in Geneva. For example, two little, round cameras placed where side mirrors typically would be are far advanced over typical cars—but were designed to look like vintage stealth-aircraft fuselages. And the round bulls-eye air vents along the front dash are stubbornly manual, even however they sit above a panel of touchscreen dashboard buttons that let the passenger adjust convenience and entertainment settings.

There are also two buttons at the glass top of the lopped-off, crescent-shaped steering wheel: one you shove to boost the car’s spectacle and 2nd you shove to limit it for safety in unpredictable driving conditions. At the center of the car, a solid lump of curved glass forms a high-definition OLED screen that controls navigation, entertainment, and climate control.

Bentley is not releasing information about the range, size, or capabilities of the motor (yet), but from this marque we can always expect high spectacle. Representatives did say it would use both rapid inductive charging for a cable-less practice and an AC power supply through an outlet in the back (hidden under the license plate) as a backup. The 12-speed also has connected, on-board concierge services directly from Bentley Motors.

The car on the floor in Geneva did not come with a top, but if the vehicle goes into production, it will most certainly have a ragtop rather than a hard top, Sielaff said. Bentley has never done a hardtop convertible.

In the event that production does begin, it’s likely that an all-electric Bentley would reach China very first. It’s here that the dual coerces of wealth and environmental concerns are meeting. 

“We forecast that some metropolitan areas around the world will need to switch dramatically; otherwise the air quality is just not acceptable any more, and this applies to Shanghai and Beijing,” Dürheimer said, adding that similar effects in London, Paris, and Los Angeles may also apply. “There will be large areas around the globe where they don’t need to bother with EVs … but what we forecast is: We could have specific hotspots where things switch dramatically, and either you have an response for this or you might be out of the market.”

“We don’t want our people who love luxury and love Bentley to switch to a different brand and not use their Bentleys anymore,” Dürheimer continued. “We want to let people know, in case you want electrified power from Bentley, this is what we are making.”

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