RE: 2024 Rolls-Royce Spectre | UK Review

RE: 2024 Rolls-Royce Spectre | UK Review

Saturday 23rd March

2024 Rolls-Royce Spectre | UK Review

A silent spin on the roads at Rolls' doorstep - is this the EV luxury benchmark?


While the advent of EVs has presented the makers of supercars with numerous challenges, for Rolls-Royce it must've seemed like a golden opportunity. After all, the effortlessness and serenity that characterise its most memorable cars are the default properties of virtually silent electric motors. There’s an undeniable majesty and prestige to a mighty V12, but for the minimum fuss and maximum refinement, nothing’s going to beat a battery-powered luxury model. 

Which Charles Rolls was all too aware of as long ago as the 19th century. The original EV tech bro knew what was up more than 120 years ahead of the Spectre’s debut; he rolled around town in something called The Columbia Electric Carriage as a 20-year-old student in 1898. It was imported from the States by Paris Singer, no less, heir to the Singer sewing machine empire. Perhaps he also knew Jay Gatsby. Anyway, after two years of use, Rolls had this to say in 1900: “The electric car is perfectly noiseless and clean.  There is no smell or vibration, and they should become very useful when fixed charging stations can be arranged.  But for now, I do not anticipate that they will be very serviceable – at least for many years to come.” Preach, Charlie. 

Even with a 102kWh battery providing the power rather than some internal combustion powerhouse, there’s no doubt that the Spectre is a Rolls-Royce. It might even be a bit too familiar for its own good, the design more evolutionary than the transformation underneath - yet even without a Spirit of Ecstasy the powerful stance, exquisite details and sheer size (almost 5.5m long, on 23-inch wheels) mean its origins are never in doubt. This look is deliberate, of course; the Spectre could have a V12 in it, with its prominent grille and Wraith-like silhouette. Clearly the point is to make the EV transition as seamless as possible for customers. Perhaps the opportunity to do something dramatic will come next. 

The same goes for inside, which could hardly feel more traditionally Rolls-Royce. Again, it’s hard not to feel like this would be the perfect time to break with the old ways, but if this is the kind of electric car customers have said they will buy, Rolls-Royce is rather compelled to make it. And there’s no faulting anything, from the luxuriant carpets to its beautiful dials, flawless veneers and wonderful hides. It smells so expensive and everything operates with the sort of perfect weight and travel that only the Goodwood-built cars manage. But anyone wowed by Hyperscreens and other EV theatrics won’t find much to get excited by. The Spectre is still a Rolls-Royce: it’s about restraint and (relative) understatement, which is cooler than trying too hard. Just this one makes even less noise than before when it’s started. 

This is sort of how it drives, too. Which is to say pretty fabulously, because even with the recognisable attributes battery power brings, there’s a very distinct style to how the Spectre gets down a road. It’s eerily refined for one thing, so subdued that you wonder if a red carpet hasn’t been rolled out for you to drive down. Even by EV standards, it is a model of hushed calm. That all the controls take a little bit of effort is welcome, too, the steering light but low geared, the throttle long in its travel and beautifully linear, building gradually yet undeniably to the full 585hp and 660lb ft. To travel briskly requires a concerted effort, and that feels very Rolls Royce, too; this isn’t a car where the throttle is brushed and you’re doing 80mph. Similarly, the brakes and regen have been beautifully calibrated, the details sweated so that one pedal driving is fantastically smooth; if there’s a need for more stopping power, it can be metered out easily and effectively. If your chauffeur is driving jerkily, it’s 100 per cent them and not the gloriously smooth car.

Without obvious driving modes or settings, it would be fair to say that the giant wheels aren’t at their happiest when going slowly on iffy roads. More thumps and bumps disturb the peace than is absolutely ideal, in addition to the anxiety of damaging such beautiful rims. The easiest solution to this conundrum is more speed, the Spectre loping along supremely at grand touring pace. Whether customers will want to use a Spectre for continent crushing remains to be seen - the range is officially 328, and that will rapidly deplete at a steady 85mph or so - though there can be little doubt that nothing feels quite so authoritative or soothing at pace as a Spectre. There always seems to be ample power in reserve, of course, and the dial remains on the left of the driver’s screen as a reminder of the fact. Just perhaps get some 22s if it’s sticking around town; three tonnes is a lot of weight to contain, so anything that can be saved off the unsprung mass will be welcome.

Despite the inevitable weight gain (over a 2.5-tonne predecessor), the benefits of the powertrain transition are felt in the Spectre’s athleticism; no ICE R-R was surely ever this keen or willing to change direction. It’s a really satisfying car to maintain momentum in, trying to ensure that you and car expend minimum effort and achieve maximum efficiency as the road bends. Even without an engine, the Rolls-Royce feel comes coursing through: it’s relaxed and reserved but never stops hinting at a greater potency. Put it this way, a Spectre Black Badge sounds great already given the foundations its maker has to work with. 

This wasn’t the opportunity to properly test charging or efficiency, but suffice it to say that a very large, very heavy, very powerful luxury car is never going to be a paragon of parsimony, whatever it’s fuelled by. Having such a whopper of a battery (120kWh gross, 102kWh usable) means it’ll need a hefty amount of charge, though when even a Taycan offers 97kWh perhaps it’s not so bad. And buying a Rolls-Royce was never done for the benefit of one’s finances. Even if it's not the most efficient EV out there, a Spectre will surely cost less to run than any V12.

So the authentic R-R feel is never in doubt: here’s a car that’s the pinnacle of opulence, good grace and decorum, albeit powered by electricity. If easy battery replenishment could be guaranteed when out and about, it’s hard to think of anything better for charging (sorry) through the miles - fundamentally, the Spectre is an epic ground coverer. The doubt that lingers about whether a relatively simple battery and motor setup can justify the same outlay as the hundreds of hours and thousands of parts that go into a flagship V12 is surely only the concern of someone with a regularly exercised overdraft; actual customers will likely be too enamoured with the regal tranquillity of their new Rolls-Royce to pay it any mind at all.


Specification | 2024 Rolls Royce Spectre

Engine: Dual motors (258hp front, 489hp rear) 102kWh (usable) battery
Transmission: Single-speed, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 585
Torque (lb ft): 660
0-62mph: 4.5 seconds
Top speed: 155mph 
Weight: 2,890kg
MPG: 329 miles range (2.6-2.8mi/kWh efficiency)
CO2: 0g/km driving
Price: from £332,055

Author
Discussion

sidesauce

Original Poster:

2,476 posts

218 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Saw one of these in the flesh a couple weeks ago for the first time (in that "crayon grey" that's the rage these days).

Colour notwithstanding, I absolutely love this car. One day, one will be mine!

mrclav

1,295 posts

223 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Article said:
It was imported from the States by Paris Singer, no less, heir to the Singer showing machine empire.
Think that was meant to be the Singer sewing machine empire...

wistec1

281 posts

41 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
The ultimate car for the tree hugging champagne socialist who would rather indulge their selves than donate to the party. As for the car, well it's EV and never for me.

Petrus1983

8,723 posts

162 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Sublime - hard to fault really. Not a mega fan of the rear light cluster - but that's just a matter of personal taste.

Augustus Windsock

3,369 posts

155 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
mrclav said:
Article said:
It was imported from the States by Paris Singer, no less, heir to the Singer showing machine empire.
Think that was meant to be the Singer sewing machine empire...
Perhaps he was right the first time and it was a relative of Sher (sic( Sean Connery that took delivery…?

Love the look of this thing but can’t help but think that the rear lights look tiny, perhaps they would have been better resolved by filling out the otherwise empty sheet metal inwards towards the edge of the boot lid, and outwards towards the edge of the flank?
The interior though: yum.

Portofino

4,286 posts

191 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Looks a bit like a Chrysler Crossfire at the back.

I’m not sure on it personally. Looks unresolved & disjointed to me.

fozzymandeus

1,044 posts

146 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Portofino said:
Looks a bit like a Chrysler Crossfire at the back.

I’m not sure on it personally. Looks unresolved & disjointed to me.
This.

Weird mixture of curves and sharp edges colliding with each other. Looks untidy and ill proportioned.

Spiros115

348 posts

50 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
The article starting out bemoaning the familiarity just misses the point, that’s precisely what makes this so brilliant, Rolls started life as an electric brand and this proves how effortlessly and naturally it has picked up the mantle.

It is so refreshing to see a brand forego the obligatory massive screens and stripped back modern aesthetic in favour of materials and craftsmanship, this is what sets rolls apart, it’s what its customers want. It’s exactly why that monstrosity from Cadillac will never steal rolls sales, it’s just another generic EV lump with no class, a copy and paste cabin and a massive price tag.

Bravo rolls, in the modern age of car design where everything is blending together (except for seemingly ever increasing vulgarity as an attempt to standout) this is restrained, sublime and through that, entirely unique.

D4rez

1,390 posts

56 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Massive shot across the bows for the idea that EVs turn models into merely trim levels. This car has great character and all the ingredients that have always made a Rolls Royce what it is

whp1983

1,173 posts

139 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Can think of no better car for EV…

Not that I’m in or near the market…. But at only 110kg away from 3 tons…. It’s only a couple of passengers and a bag away from me needing a different license to drive it!

Fabulous thing

IJWS15

1,850 posts

85 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
At last, an electric car, not a game boy on wheels.

Billy_Whizzzz

2,008 posts

143 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Hideous. Vulgar. And three tonnes!

Matt Bird

1,450 posts

205 months

PH Reportery Lad

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
mrclav said:
Think that was meant to be the Singer sewing machine empire...
Flippin heck, sorry, what an amateur. Sorting now!

GT9

6,576 posts

172 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Billy_Whizzzz said:
And three tonnes!
Yawn.

“Despite the inevitable weight gain, the benefits of the powertrain transition are felt in the Spectre’s athleticism; no ICE R-R was surely ever this keen or willing to change direction. It’s a really satisfying car to maintain momentum in, trying to ensure that you and car expend minimum effort and achieve maximum efficiency as the road bends”

GreatScott2016

1,186 posts

88 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Good read (for an EV review) smile . I think the opening paragraph sums things up perfectly.

biggbn

23,351 posts

220 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
All kinds of yes from me. Wow

Bloxxcreative

519 posts

45 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Perfect car for an EV adapt. Sounds like it nails the brief in every way and improves on ICE RRs nicely.

solopb

67 posts

140 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
ALL CARS TODAY WAY TOO BIG AND LARDY, BIT LIKE HAVING A GT SOFA,WITH A HUmongoUS GRILLE.

Glenn63

2,760 posts

84 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Hideous. Vulgar. And three tonnes!
If that weight scares you don’t look at the upcoming electric Escalade!
I’m sure it’s a delightful way to travel but I’m not a fan of its looks. Always preferred Bentley and I’d take a conti GT if a 2 door coupe was what I desired.
Both RR and Bentley have the best interiors by far by avoiding the stupid massive stuck on screen crap that every other manufacturer is doing.

TinpotTintop

87 posts

31 months

Saturday 23rd March
quotequote all
I also don't like the rear lights, and the front isn't well resolved. Interior is awesome and love the lack stupid screens.

Having been in V12 Rollers and Bentleys, part of the experience is knowing there is a beautifully engineered ICE up front, that you have to strain to hear. You try to catch it out, it's like a game. Can't help thinking that an electric powertrain would feel like a bit of an anticlimax, a missing part of the whole experience