New Straits Times

ZERO TO 100KPH IN 1.9 SECONDS

- KEVIN BUCKLAND

IMAGINE a car that exists only to humiliate every other car off the line at a stop light. How much should that cost? One million? Two million? How about €3.1 million (RM14.8 million). A little-known Japanese company is betting at least 50 people will say yes. At least, that’s the number it will make of its all-electric Owl.

When it delivers the first car in mid-2020, Osaka-based Aspark is guaranteei­ng customers a sprint time of 1.99 seconds from a dead stop to 100kph on street-legal tyres. A prototype that sports racing slicks already clocked this in as little as 1.89 seconds in February.

That face-flattening performanc­e is fuelled by an electric powertrain that promises to deliver a minimum 1,150hp and 885Nw of torque, according to an official spec sheet. A carbon-fibre body and magnesium alloy wheels keep the rest of the car as light as possible, giving it a dry weight of about 1,500kg.

The Owl will be on display at the Paris Motor Show that begins this week, and the company will start taking non-refundable €1 million deposits there.

You won’t be able to test drive it for another year or so, though - the show car is basically a shell, and the test car is back at a warehouse in Japan. Even the powertrain won’t be finalised for a couple of months, as the handful of engineers comprising the Owl team debates crucial details like how many motors to use.

The low-slung two-seater certainly looks the part of a Lambo killer. Aspark founder and chief executive officer Masanori Yoshida says the sleek lines are as much about fulfilling his own personal hypercar fantasy as about aerodynami­cs.

The front end is designed to be menacing when spotted approachin­g in the rear-view mirror, and the tail lights are styled to resemble a smug grin as the car accelerate­s away.

Voluptuous wheel arches and an oversized spoiler give an air of extravagan­ce, but in other respects the car is spartan. There’s little in the way of electronic­s to speak of, and no assisted-driving features. Overnight trip? Forget about it. The only storage space is the glove box.

That’s not really surprising when you consider the Owl’s single-minded purpose. Apart from its blistering accelerati­on, the car is rather unremarkab­le for the price. It promises a top speed of 280kph and 300km of range on a full charge.

Compare that to the Owl’s evergrowin­g list of rivals, and it’s clear just how much Aspark is counting on enthusiast­s to pay for a 10th-of-asecond advantage. From the C Two from electric hypercar pioneer Rimac and iconic car designer Pininfarin­a’s PF0 to Tesla Inc’s next-generation Roadster, all promise similar sprint times — but with higher top speeds and hundreds of kilometres in additional range. Even the most expensive of these costs more than €1 million less, and the Roadster looks a positive steal, at US$250,000 (RM1.03 million).

It’s unclear that Aspark’s claim to be the quickest is even accurate. Measuremen­ts can vary according to the type of tyres and how much “rollout” is included in the time. Nor is there any guarantee that in the yearand-a-half before the Owl’s first delivery, technologi­cal advances won’t allow for another car that is exponentia­lly quicker.

Those customers who laid down seven-figure sums would find themselves with something rather average, instead of extraordin­ary. For Aspark, cracking the two-second barrier may turn out to have been the easy part.

 ?? PHOTOGRAPH­ER: MARLENE AWAAD/ BLOOMBERG ?? Aspark chief executive officer Masanori Yoshida
PHOTOGRAPH­ER: MARLENE AWAAD/ BLOOMBERG Aspark chief executive officer Masanori Yoshida
 ??  ?? The Aspark Owl’s unveiling on Sept. 29.
The Aspark Owl’s unveiling on Sept. 29.
 ??  ?? The all-digital dashboard.
The all-digital dashboard.

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