Lighter all-new F-Type could turn pure electric – or use a BMW-sourced V8 set-up
Jaguar is considering an all-electric version of its next-generation F-Type sports car, due by 2021.
Fully electric propulsion is one of a range of powertrains being
assessed for the new UK-built sports car. Another is a 4.4-litre
BMW-sourced V8.
A replacement for the F-Type is still at least two years away,
despite it being already six years old. Design chief Ian Callum told
Autocar that “being a specialist car, it will have a longer life than
the mainstream models”. Callum also confirmed that “despite sports cars
not being a great growth area, there will be a future for the F-Type”.
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'A purely electric F-Type would give Jaguar the scope to be as bold as it was with the E-Type' |
Developing a purely electric F-Type replacement would provide its
designers and engineers with the scope to produce a design as bold as
the E-Type was in 1961.
Packaging the batteries below the floor would yield a dynamically
valuable low centre of gravity and hybrid aluminium body construction
would go some way to mitigating the weight penalty of the battery pack.
Although today’s I-Pace
is propelled by two 197bhp electric motors fed by a 90kWh battery pack,
the energy density of batteries will have improved by the time the
F-Type emerges and there will be plenty of scope to offer more powerful
motors. Mounting the motors over both axles would allow Jaguar to
continue offering rear- and four-wheel drive, the latter with a torque
bias to the back axle.
More than one powertrain option is in the running for the new F-Type,
with electrification a strong likelihood. However, it’s not yet clear
if petrol and electric options will be offered at the same time.
Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) plans to source its next-generation V8 petrol engine, codenamed Project Jennifer, from BMW.
In its most potent form, the newly developed 4.4-litre
twin-turbocharged engine is said to produce around 640bhp and nearly
600lb ft of torque, an upper limit that would make the F-Type
competitive with the most powerful Porsche 911s.
Falling global V8 sales
are the reason for JLR once again sharing an eight-cylinder unit with
BMW (the last time was when the German car maker owned the Rover Group
in the 1990s), making this the only business-viable approach.
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'An all-new platform will make the next-generation F-Type lighter and more space-efficient' |
As well as being more space efficient and lighter, the new platform
will need to be able to meet the next generation of crash requirements.
Among these is a roll-over test that will involve a car being dropped
onto its roof from a point 1.5 times its own height without
significantly crushing the passenger cell.
A choice of petrol and electric powertrains would severely constrain
the design freedom provided by a pure-electric drivetrain but widen the
F-Type’s appeal. The temptation, though, might be to simplify, be bold
and go electric, which would fit in with potential future plans for
Jaguar to be an EV-only brand.
As reported by Autocar in September, investors at Tata, Jaguar’s parent company, are unhappy with the sales performance of the brand’s existing petrol and diesel models. A radical product overhaul is on the cards,
with a strategy said to be outlined by product planners to phase out
the traditional line-up and replace it with a range of fully electric
models.
Jaguar already has impressive credentials in the EV arena with the new I-Pace,
which has been well received and is selling strongly. JLR UK managing
director Rawdon Glover recently reported “a six-month order bank,
250,000 website configurations and requests for more than 1000 test
drives. We could take 20% more cars today.”
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Next XJ luxury saloon will be electric only and arrive in 2020 |
Before the next-generation F-Type is revealed, Jaguar is planning a few upgrades to the existing model. Callum said it “will be improved dynamically and in other areas and there will be weight reductions”. Alongside that, the ‘2020’-model-year F-Type range has just been announced, the centrepiece being Chequered Flag special-edition versions, which mark 70 years since the launch of the 1948 Jaguar XK120.
Besides these models, the range gains minor tweaks and equipment upgrades and the F-Type R adopts the SVR’s damper tune to improve low-speed ride comfort.
What the new F-Type must beat:
Tesla Roadster
An electric F-Type would immediately be compared with Tesla’s second-gen roadster. The Californian EV, due by 2020, promises astonishing pace, with claims of a 1.9sec 0-60mph time and 250mph top speed.
With EV rivals few and far between, the F-Type will still be pitted against the ever-dominant 911. The ‘992’ generation is set to receive a number of hybrid variants across its range, but no fully electric model is planned yet.
Mercedes SL
The new F-Type convertible will find itself pitched against the next-gen SL, which is set to become more driver-focused with AMG performance input. It’s due in 2020 and hybridised variants are on the cards.
Source: https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/electric-jaguar-f-type-could-arrive-2021
1 Comments
Where is my Jaguar, baby don't tesla, don't tesla, no more!
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