Penticton Herald

Gas-powered muscle cars to drive into sunset, turn electric

- By TOM KRISHER

PONTIAC, Mich. — Thundering gas-powered muscle cars, for decades a fixture of American culture, will be closing in on their final Saturday-night cruises in the coming years as automakers begin replacing them with super-fast cars that run on batteries.

Stellantis’ Dodge brand, long the performanc­e flag-bearer of the company formerly known as Fiat Chrysler, is officially moving toward electricit­y. On Wednesday night, Dodge unveiled a battery-powered Charger Daytona SRT concept car, which is close to one that will be produced in 2024 as the sun sets on some petroleum models.

Stellantis says it will stop making gasoline versions of the Dodge Challenger and Charger muscle cars and the Chrysler 300 large car by the end of next year. The Canadian factory that makes them will be converted to electric vehicles. Other automakers are moving – or have moved – in the same direction.

General Motors has said it will build an allelectri­c Chevrolet Corvette. Tesla says its Model S Plaid version is the fastest production vehicle made, able to go from zero to 97 kilometres per hour in under 2 seconds. Audi, Mercedes, Porsche and other European automakers already have high-performanc­e electric models on sale. And Polestar, an electric-performanc­e spinoff from Volvo, just announced a new Polestar 6 roadster for 2026.

One reason for the industry shift is that electric vehicles are simply faster off the starting line. Their handling is typically better, too, because their heavy batteries create a low centre of gravity.

Stricter government pollution requiremen­ts are another factor, too. As automakers in the U.S. face more stringent fuel-economy requiremen­ts adopted by the Biden administra­tion and produce a broader range of EV vehicles, they will have to jettison some of their gas-fueled muscle-car models.

Tim Kuniskis, CEO of the Dodge brand, said the possibly of government fines for not meeting gas-mileage requiremen­ts hastened the shift to the electric Charger. “Compliance fines and things like that associated with a big cast-iron supercharg­ed V8, yes, it’s tough,” he said.

Still, it will take a few years for the gas-powered classics to go away.

“Over the next several years, I think we’ll continue to have some internal combustion stuff, probably through most of the decade,” said Sam Abuelsamid, a research analyst at Guidehouse Insights. “But increasing­ly, the focus is going to be on the electric ones.”

Under new gas-mileage standards that were unveiled in April, the fleet of new vehicles will have to average around 40 miles per gallon in 2026, up from 25.4 mpg now, the EPA says. The standards are likely to become even stronger in the future, a trend that will compel U.S.-based automakers to shed some gasoline muscle cars if they are to avoid fines.

Of all major automakers, the EPA says, Stellantis had the lowest average fuel economy – 21.3 miles per gallon – and the highest average carbon dioxide emissions. So the company likely will have to eliminate some models to avoid fines. Its limited-edition Charger SRT Widebody, with a supercharg­ed 6.2-litre Hemi Hellcat V-8, for instance, gets only 12 mpg in city driving and 21 mpg on the highway.

To many gearheads, the thought of a muscle car without noise and smells is heresy. But Kuniskis says Dodge is working hard to make the electric experience match internal combustion. The Charger, he said, will generate its own air flow to make an exhaust noise that rivals gas performanc­e cars. And the transmissi­on will shift gears.

When the electric Charger was driven through a garage door and entered a building Wednesday night at a racetrack in Pontiac, Michigan, it roared just like a gas muscle car.

Electric vehicles, Kuniskis said, have the potential to perform better than gas muscle cars with fast accelerati­on. But he said they are kind of sterile. “It doesn’t have the emotion. It doesn’t have the drama. It doesn’t have the kind of dangerous feeling that ICE (an internal combustion engine) has when it’s loud and rumbling and shifting and moving the car around.”

Kuniskis wouldn’t say how fast the electric Charger will go from zero to 60 mph, but said it would be faster than the company’s current petroleum performanc­e cars. He also wouldn’t say the range-per-charge for the new Challenger, but added that range isn’t as important as making it a true muscle car.

Rick Nelson, the owner of Musclecar Restoratio­n & Design in Pleasant Plains, Illinois, near Springfiel­d, cautioned that switching from loud fuel-burning engines to quiet electricit­y may be a hard sell to oldtimers who grew up with the sounds and smells of racing.

Nelson, 61, said he restored his first car while a teenager and spent hours at drag strips. He acknowledg­ed that the switch to electricit­y is inevitable and is needed to attract a new generation that has become used to quiet speed. Still, he said, electric muscle cars won’t have manual shifters, and he’ll miss the smell of racing fuel at the track.

Already, Nelson said, businesses are cropping up to put electric powertrain­s in classic muscle cars. He has been in touch with an engineer at Tesla about retrofitti­ng batteries and electric motors into some classics.

“Guys like me are just going to frown on it and laugh at it,” Nelson said of electric muscle cars. “But this isn’t about my generation.”

Kuniskis says the shift to electricit­y doesn’t mean the end of the muscle car. It’s just a new era.

“It’ s OK,” he said. “Let us show you what the future looks like.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? The Dodge Charger Daytona SRT concept is unveiled, Wednesday, in Pontiac, Mich.
The Associated Press The Dodge Charger Daytona SRT concept is unveiled, Wednesday, in Pontiac, Mich.

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