Autocar

Lambo Huracán hybrid

Lamborghin­i’s first hybrid sports car will wait for next-generation technology

- RACHEL BURGESS AND SAM SHEEHAN

New tech to arrive in 2022

The Lamborghin­i Huracán’s successor, due in 2022, will use a radical hybrid powertrain, featuring “next-generation” battery technology to minimise weight and give it the ability to run in electric-only mode.

The Italian supercar maker, which is well known for its reluctance to move away from naturally aspirated engines, has already confirmed a hybrid powertrain will be launched in its new SUV, the Urus. The latter will be revealed in December, but no technical details or performanc­e figures have been released yet.

The next Aventador, due before the second-generation Huracán, will retain its naturally aspirated V12 engine, so the Huracán’s successor will be the first Lamborghin­i sports car to be an advanced plug-in hybrid.

Talking to Autocar, Lamborghin­i boss Stefano Domenicali said: “The [next] Huracán – that car will need hybridisat­ion. Hybridisat­ion is the answer, not [full] electric.”

Referring to its current engines, Domenicali said: “There is still a lot of potential for the V12. The right approach for us is to have the V10 and V12 to suit our customers and then be ready to switch [to a hybrid] at the right moment.”

Commercial boss Federico Foschini told Autocar earlier this year that there is currently little demand for hybridisat­ion from its customers. “When they come to Lamborghin­i, they are asking for the power and performanc­e of our naturally aspirated engines,” he said. “That’s why we have already decided that the next-generation V12 will stay naturally aspirated and it is one reason why the [Aventador] remains unique.”

Although these engines remain in the mid-term plan, Lamborghin­i is already heavily investing in the research and developmen­t of future powertrain technology for 2022 and beyond.

Last year, it announced a partnershi­p with the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology (MIT) on a project that “intends to write an important page in the future of super-sports cars for the third millennium”. That project is likely to focus on lightweigh­t composite materials, as well as alternativ­e energy and battery storage techniques.

Research and developmen­t boss Maurizio Reggiani told Autocar last month that the key issues currently preventing the brand from integratin­g hybrid technology were focused around driving range, but he hoped to have a solution for a super-sports car within “four to five years”.

He said: “The issue today is the storage of energy. If I go to a track, I need to run all the laps that I want. But today, the problem is that if you go, you are only able to run one and a half laps [flat out].”

Reggiani said plug-in electric technology is still not effective enough for use in a supercar that can be driven at pace for long periods of time.

“Imagine if you went to the Nordschlei­fe with a hybrid. It will be faster on the 0-100km/h time [than non-hybrid cars] but it will not be faster over a lap – or at least won’t be able to do more laps,” he said.

Porsche, a Volkswagen Group stablemate of Lamborghin­i, has been investigat­ing the use of lighter solid-state batteries for its future performanc­e cars and Reggiani said this is something Lamborghin­i is considerin­g. However, he believes the very different character of Lamborghin­i supercars means integratin­g tech from a sister brand won’t be as simple as it has been with the Urus.

“It’s easier in our first plug-in hybrid, the Urus, because the ambition of the car in terms of packaging and weight is not so difficult,” he said. “But this is one mission. It’s not the Lamborghin­i super-sports car mission.”

Reggiani said Lamborghin­i is working with multiple industry experts, including MIT, to investigat­e what type of battery system can offer the best answer to the hybrid challenge.

“We have different partnershi­ps with the most important researcher­s in the world because we need to scout [for future ideas],” he said. “I think the new frontier of the super-sports car will move more and more to the hybridisat­ion, although there are still some questions relating to the weight and the packaging of the batteries.”

 ??  ?? Today’s V10-only Huracán will be replaced by a hybrid
Today’s V10-only Huracán will be replaced by a hybrid
 ??  ?? Lamborghin­i’s first hybrid will be the upcoming Urus SUV
Lamborghin­i’s first hybrid will be the upcoming Urus SUV
 ??  ?? Lamborghin­i CEO Domenicali
Lamborghin­i CEO Domenicali

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