How McLaren aims to rebuild supercars to roar into electric era
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[February 16, 2021] By
Nick Carey
HEADLEY DOWN, England (Reuters) - There's
nothing quite like the roar of a revving McLaren engine to set a
petrolhead's pulse pounding, or the full-throated scream as it tears
across the tarmac.
Yet new gas-fuelled engines like McLaren's could be illegal in many
countries by 2030. The supercar maker, like all automakers, has to go
electric - but that's easier said than done for a niche player that
can't compromise the performance, and racing experience, that supports
its rarefied pricing and exclusivity.
McLaren could probably produce a fully-electric vehicle tomorrow, said
Ruth Nic Aoidh, the British carmaker's executive director for
purchasing. But the weight of today's batteries "would kill all of the
attributes that make a McLaren a McLaren".
So instead, Nic Aoidh says McLaren is taking more time to rethink the
way it builds vehicles from the wheels up. It is also looking to
overhaul its business model, to generate revenue from selling some of
its new technology to other automakers.
The people it ultimately has to keep happy are affluent enthusiasts like
Steve Glynn, who make up McLaren's base.
A racing driver, Glynn teaches others how to drive their supercars
around private tracks, where the combination of raw speed and precise
handling separate McLarens and Ferraris from cars that cost a tenth as
much.
Glynn just bought his fourth McLaren, a black 620R, in January. He
declined to say what he paid for it, but the 620R starts at around
250,000 pounds ($346,000).
"I'm a petrolhead through and through, but I think we have to accept the
future of electrification beckons everyone," he said at his home in
Headley Down, a village in southern England less than hour's drive from
McLaren's Woking headquarters.
"But an electrified McLaren would still have to put that same smile on
your face."
Even for deep-pocketed behemoths like Volkswagen AG, developing electric
vehicles is an expensive proposition that is taxing their capital
resources.
Other smaller premium carmakers like Volkswagen unit Bentley or Tata
Motors Ltd's Jaguar Land Rover, which both plan to electrify their model
lineups by 2030, can rely on their owners' financial backing to make the
switch.
But for niche manufacturers like McLaren, lack of scale is a major
challenge. Last year McLaren said it would cut 1,200 jobs - more than a
quarter of its workforce - as it dealt with fallout from the COVID-19
pandemic.
McLaren's cars start at around 120,000 pounds and range up to 750,000
pounds. It sold 4,662 vehicles in 2019, but thanks to pandemic shutdowns
the company said in November its 2020 sales would hit around 1,700 cars
and its revenue could fall by up to half.
McLaren will reveal some of its progress toward it electric ambitions
with the Artura, a hybrid model, launching on Feb. 17.
ALL ABOUT THE WEIGHT
Weight is of paramount importance to customers.
To cut cost and help reduce its vehicles' weight 15% in order to carry
heavy batteries, McLaren has developed a new in-house process to make a
carbon composite chassis, or "tub", in minutes at a 50 million pound
site in Rotherham, England.
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Andy Abbosh, a McLaren owner who says he's willing to try out an
electric version once it becomes available, stands next to his car
at his home in Farnham, Britain February 11, 2021 REUTERS/Nick Carey
"If McLaren are going to take the electrified route to a supercar, they'll need
to maintain the light weighting as much as possible," said Andy Abbosh, who owns
a pearl white McLaren 650S Spider.
McLaren's new chassis will be used in the Artura, and by 2026 all its cars will
be hybrids using this chassis, Nic Aoidh said. The carmaker aims to have fully
electric models on the road towards the end of this decade, she added.
The process has brought mass production of carbon composite parts a step closer
and McLaren is talking to other carmakers and manufacturers in other sectors on
how to monetize the technology, according to Nic Aoidh.
"The way companies like ours will find our way to electrification is through
innovation," she said. "That will potentially open up doors for return on
investments."
McLaren will also develop its own batteries, which could also generate fresh
revenue streams, she added.
'WE'RE SELLING EMOTION'
Electric hypercar maker Rimac, which aims to bring its C-Two model to market
later this year, plans something similar.
The company plans to build four of the cars per month and has its first year of
production sold out, according to founder Mate Rimac.
He said the market for these vehicles was limited and would probably hit a
ceiling of around 100 vehicles per year, worth several hundred million euros.
But where he sees a far greater business opportunity is to operate as an auto
supplier, where it licenses, develops and manufactures systems and components
for other carmakers, as it does already for Aston Martin and a number of others.
"We want to showcase with our cars what's possible, then help carmakers build
exciting electric cars and make the transition to electric faster," Rimac added.
But it remains to be seen whether supercar makers like McLaren, with reputations
forged on gas-guzzling race tracks, can successfully reinvent themselves for an
electric era.
Pietro Frigerio, dealer principal at McLaren Newport Beach in southern
California, worries a McLaren electric car without the famous throaty growl of a
combustion engine could get lost in a crowd.
"What we're selling here is emotion," Frigerio said. "When you come to spend
$300,000-plus on a car, you want it to look different and feel different."
($1 = 0.7225 pounds)
(Reporting By Nick Carey; Editing by Pravin Char)
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