DATOKEEHUACHEE@GMAIL.COM
THE NEW ROLLS-ROYCE GHOST Reflecting the minimalist philosophy that underpins New Ghost, highlights of this transformative motor car are listed in short form below. |
-Royce
EXPLORES A VERY UNIQUE MUSE:
A
ROLLS-ROYCE ROSE
|
Reflects ‘Post Opulent’ design
philosophy, rejecting superficial expressions of wealth Built on rigid
aluminium Rolls-Royce spaceframe architecture
All-wheel drive and all-wheel
steering for unprecedented poise and surefootedness
World first Planar suspension
system significantly increases agility and effortlessness Equipped with
hallmark 6.75-litre twin-turbo V12 engine, delivering 571PS and 850nm
For effortless egress, doors now
electrically open as well as close
Interior components tuned to
specific resonant frequency to create a sense of serenity
Down lit Pantheon grille
discreetly illuminates Rolls-Royce iconography
Illuminated Fascia debuts
featuring Ghost nameplate surrounded by more than 850 stars
THE NEW ROLLS-ROYCE GHOST PERFECTION IN SIMPLICITY |
#rollsroyceghost
“The
first Goodwood Ghost was a response to a whole new generation of clients, both
in age and attitude. These men and women asked us for a slightly smaller, less
ostentatious means to own a Rolls-Royce. The success of the product we created
for them fulfilled our most ambitious expectations. Over its ten-year lifespan,
which began in 2009, Ghost has become the most successful model in the marque’s
116-year history.
To create a new product that would resonate with
our Ghost clients for the next ten years meant we had to listen carefully to
their demands. Today we set new standards in customer centricity by creating a
completely new motor car for a unique group of Rolls-Royce’s clients. These
business leaders and entrepreneurs demand more of their Ghost than ever. They
require a new type of super-luxury saloon that is dynamic, serenely comfortable
and perfect in its minimalism. Ghost is this product.
The only components that we carried over from the first Goodwood Ghost were the Spirit of Ecstasy and umbrellas. Everything else was designed, crafted and engineered from the ground up. The result is the most technologically advanced Rolls-Royce yet. It distils the pillars of our brand into a beautiful, minimalist, yet highly complex product that is perfectly in harmony with our Ghost clients’ needs and perfectly in tune with the times.”
Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
INTRODUCTION
In 2009, Rolls-Royce announced a new addition to its portfolio that offered something entirely different to its flagship Phantom. This product resonated with a new group of men and women who responded to the marque’s relentless pursuit of perfection in design, engineering and craftsmanship, but sought a more modest and minimalist expression of Rolls-Royce.
Additionally, Ghost’s decade-long market presence
enabled the marque’s Luxury Intelligence Specialists to gather vital
information about developing behaviours in how Ghost clients use their motor
car, how they commission it and how they perceive Rolls-Royce. These highly
successful and diverse entrepreneurs and founders, who selected this product to
celebrate their ongoing ascension, were citizens of the world – they had been
educated abroad, they travelled extensively and experienced Rolls-Royce in many
cultures.
Across
all markets, when clients commissioned their Ghost they asked the marque’s
representatives about the driving experience, even if they had selected an
extended wheelbase. During the weekend, this business tool morphed into a
discreet celebration – clients would switch to the driver’s seat and relish a
trip to a restaurant or second home with their friends and family. They
celebrated this breadth of character, and this reflected in less formal
colourways and more personalisation in the driver’s eyeline. These were
profound learnings.
Meanwhile, at Goodwood, significant advances were being made with the marque’s proprietary aluminium spaceframe architecture. First used on Phantom, then Cullinan, this spaceframe is unique to Rolls-Royce and enables the brand’s designers and engineers to develop an authentically super-luxury product, free from the constraints of platforms used to underpin high-volume vehicles.
As Ghost
clients required even more of their motor car, Rolls-Royce used its
architecture to respond, incorporating technology such as all-wheel drive and
all-wheel steering in Ghost, unlocking an entirely new, purposeful personality.
Concurrently, the design team were tracking an emerging movement that came to define Ghost’s aesthetic treatment. It spoke of a shifting attitude among Ghost clients in the way success is expressed. Named ‘Post Opulence’ internally, it is characterised by reduction and substance. In service to this, exceptional materials must be selected and celebrated.
Design must be limited, intelligent and unobtrusive. This philosophy is the antithesis of ‘premium mediocracy’, a term coined by the fashion cognoscenti. This refers to products that use superficial treatments, such as large branding or, in the context of motor cars, busy stitching and other devices that create an illusion of luxury by dressing products lacking in substance in a premium skin.The
collective result is new Ghost. This is a motor car precisely tailored to its
clients, that appears perfect in its simplicity, that is underpinned by
remarkable substance, that is less but better.
ENGINEERING
Proprietary
Aluminium Spaceframe Architecture
The
marque’s designers, engineers and craftspeople demanded the freedom to create a
very specific personality for new Ghost. These men and women were only able to
create an authentically super-luxury product without the constraints of
platforms used to underpin lesser, high-volume vehicles. Hence, the Rolls-Royce
proprietary aluminium spaceframe architecture.
Reserved exclusively for Rolls-Royce, this
architecture already underpins its flagship, Phantom, and its transformative
SUV, Cullinan. The spaceframe’s flexibility and scalability freed the marque to
serve the unique aesthetic and mechanical demands of new Ghost, and in doing so
created an acoustically superior, highly rigid and dynamic proposition for
Ghost within the Rolls-Royce product portfolio.
In its most pared back form, the Rolls-Royce
architecture is based around four fixed points, one at each corner of the motor
car. The moveable aluminium bulkhead, floor, crossmembers and sill panels were
positioned specifically to ensure new Ghost meets client expectations as a
motor car that is equally enjoyable to drive as it is to be driven in. Two of
the cast suspension mounting assembles were pushed to the very front of new
Ghost, placing its 6.75-litre V12 behind the front axle to achieve an optimum
50/50 weight distribution.
To
accommodate this without intruding on new Ghost’s interior suite, its overall
length has grown by 89mm, compared to the first Goodwood Ghost, to 5546mm, and
its overall width has grown by 30mm to 1978mm. Significant changes were also
made to the double-skinned bulkhead and floor structure packaging.
These
were undertaken to incorporate an all-wheel drivetrain, all-wheel steering and
completely redesigned Planar Suspension System, which further enhances the
marque’s hallmark Magic Carpet Ride. This was achieved without compromising the
motor car’s low centre of gravity, which aids cornering dynamics.
Further
capitalising on the marque’s aluminium expertise, the metal superstructure of
new Ghost is 100% made of the material. The car’s outer body is rendered as one
clean, expansive piece, flowing seamlessly from the A-pillar, over the roof and
backwards to the rear of the car, recalling the seemingly one-piece coachbuilt
Silver Dawn and Silver Cloud models.
This
complete absence of shut lines allows clients to run their eye from the front
to the rear of the car uninterrupted by ungainly body seams. To achieve this,
four craftsmen hand weld the body together simultaneously to ensure a perfectly
continuous seam. In addition, 100% aluminium, laser-welded doors have been
used. This not only offers weight benefits and remarkable 40,000Nm/deg
stiffness, but the material has a lower acoustic impedance than steel,
improving cabin ambience.
6.75-Litre
Twin-Turbocharged V12
Client feedback asking for near-instant torque
and near-silent running led the marque to further develop the Rolls-Royce
6.75-litre twin-turbocharged V12 petrol engine. A bespoke Ghost engine map was
created to ensure ample performance for this dynamic motor car, delivering
563bhp/420kW and 850Nm/627lb ft of torque to the all-wheel steer, all-wheel
drivetrain. Commensurate with clients’ expectations, maximum torque is
available from just 1600rpm – only 600rpm above tick-over. To further refine
its already remarkable acoustic properties, the air intake system incorporated
larger porting to reduce engine presence in the interior suite.
No comments:
Post a Comment