economic_finance402 wordsRead on Arc Codex

Alpine’s All-Electric A110 Just Made Its Debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed

The electric Alpine A110 is no longer a theoretical proposition. The battery-powered version of the French automaker’s beloved sports car made its public debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed on Thursday. The car on display is only a “development mule,” according to the company, but it represents the first time the EV has been seen in motion. BWT Alpine Formula One Team driver Pierre Gasly was at the wheel of the car, which will be called the A110 Future, as it tackled Goodwood’s famous hill climb. The driver, who had the event’s organizer, the Duke of Richmond, in the passenger seat, was instructed to take it easy, according to Top Gear, but video of the run shows the car having no difficulty navigating the 1.17-mile course and its nine turns. “Alpine continues to show that an electric sports car can be lighter, sharper, and really enjoyable to drive,” Gasly said in a statement. “I am certainly excited to see what the future holds and I hope everyone enjoyed this show today.” Alpine referring to the electric A110 at Goodwood as a development mule suggests that the vehicle remains a work in progress. Despite this, we do have one important concrete detail about the car, which is that it will utilize the all-new Alpine Performance Platform. The modular setup swaps out the last-gen A110’s 1.8-liter turbocharged inline-four for two electric motors, both of which are positioned on the rear axle. Those motors, which Alpine has dubbed the “dual E-motor,” are fed by an 800-volt battery system. The pack is split between both ends of the vehicle, with 25 percent of power directed to the front and 75 percent to the rear. The rear bias, along with a torque vectoring system, plays a key role in ensuring that the EV handles like a traditional mid-engine sports car—which the first two iterations of the A110 were—while also leaving open the possibility of the addition of a frontward motor in the future. Last year, Alpine CEO Philippe Krief told Road & Track that the automaker was targeting an output of 464 hp for the A110 Future, which gives it more than 100 horses more than the most potent model from the car’s second generation, the A110 R Ultime. The marque is also prioritizing keeping its weight below 3,000 lbs, which would make it significantly lighter than the majority of performance-oriented EVs currently on the market.

How it works

Once you click Generate, Ollama reads this article and crafts 5 comprehension questions. Your answers are graded against the article content — general knowledge won't be enough. Score 70+ to count toward your certificate.

Questions are cached — you'll always get the same 5 for this article.