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A SPIRIT OF BOLD INNOVATION: THE EXTRAORDINARY HISTORY OF THE SPECTRE NAME
Mon Oct 10 10:00:00 CEST 2022 Informação à Imprensa
Choosing a name for a new Rolls-Royce motor car is a crucial, highly considered and painstaking process, in which the marque's unique heritage plays a central part.
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- Rolls-Royce Motor Cars reveals the history of the name chosen for its new battery-electric vehicle, Spectre, from the beginning of the project
- First time that the Spectre name has been given to a series production Rolls‑Royce
- Previously used only for one early demonstrator car and 10 experimental chassis
- Historic Spectre models profoundly influenced key Rolls-Royce developments in the 20th Century
- Part of a long-standing use of ethereal names to encapsulate
Rolls-Royce's near-silent running
“The advent of our first battery-electric car marks the start of a
bold new era for Rolls-Royce. It is also the culmination of a long,
painstaking process, in which every element in creating this
landmark car has been considered in the minutest detail, over
numerous iterations. But one aspect of this landmark motor car has
always been certain: from the very outset, we determined that it
would bear the name Spectre – the first series production
Rolls-Royce ever to do so. It was a decision initially inspired by
our heritage: 'Spectre' cars were always associated with
ground-breaking technical innovations, the relentless pursuit of
perfection, and a sense of mystery and otherworldliness. The motor
car we now present to the world embodies all those qualities, while
making the Spectre name entirely its own.”
Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce
Motor Cars
Choosing a name for a new Rolls-Royce motor car is a
crucial, highly considered and painstaking process, in which the
marque's unique heritage plays a central part. Of the current product
family, all but Cullinan (named after the largest gem-quality rough
diamond ever discovered) bear storied names from the past: Phantom,
Ghost, Dawn and Wraith all have namesakes spanning Rolls-Royce's
118-year history.
In naming its first battery-electric vehicle, Rolls-Royce sought
to maintain and strengthen these important 'genetic' links, while also
marking a definitive shift into new territory defined by innovation
and progress. As the following brief history explains, it found the
perfect solution with Spectre.
WHAT'S IN A NAME?
According to a Chinese
proverb, ‘the beginning of wisdom is to call things by their right
names’, reflecting our innate need to identify and classify objects as
a way to make sense of the universe. This is entirely obvious in
relation to people, of course; and for our early ancestors, naming
objects was a crucial survival technique. But why name an inanimate
object like a motor car?
The practice is as old as the motor car itself. Before the First
World War, road transport was still dominated by horses and
horse-drawn vehicles and those who could afford a Rolls-Royce would
certainly have also kept and used horses themselves. It would
therefore have been entirely natural and logical for them to name
their new car, just as they would have done a favourite steed.
The marketing potential of this fundamental human trait was
immediately evident to the keen business mind of Claude Johnson, the
commercial managing director of Rolls-Royce. Between 1905 and 1913 he
personally devised, often in consultation with the client, individual
names for almost 50 cars the company produced – the most famous of
which was 'The Silver Ghost', created for the 1907 London
Motor Show. The car's silver paintwork and silver-plated brightwork so
impressed motoring journalists and the public alike that 'Silver
Ghost' was adopted as the official model name for all 40/50 H.P.
chassis built until 1925, when the New Phantom was introduced.
Johnson would surely be gratified that these ethereal,
otherworldly names, intended to capture the car's near-silent running,
still grace Rolls-Royce models, referencing this same quality more
than a century later.
‘THE SILVER SPECTRE’ (CHASSIS 1601, 1910)
In
August 1910, the marque built Chassis 1601, which Johnson used as a
trials, or demonstrator, car. Johnson named it ‘The Silver
Spectre’ – the first recorded use of the Spectre name in the
company's archive.
Chassis 1601 was sold to the War Office in 1915 and its last
known whereabouts was at a firm of motor engineers in Sheffield in
1933. Over the course of its lifetime, this car was rebodied at least
three times. This was typical during this period, often to suit the
new owner's tastes if the car had changed hands, and sometimes for
more prosaic reasons: early coachwork employed materials and methods
that, while perfectly suited to horse-drawn vehicles doing 10mph,
quickly succumbed to the strains of travelling at 50mph or more in
automotive use. While the eventual fate of Chassis 1601 remains
somewhat unclear, one thing is certain: no Rolls-Royce would bear the
Spectre name again for over 20 years.
THE EXPERIMENTAL PHANTOM III 'SPECTRE' CARS (1934-7)
Early in its history, Rolls-Royce established a special
naming convention for its experimental cars, giving them chassis
numbers with the suitably tantalising suffix 'EX'. Beginning with 1EX
in 1919 and running through to 45EX in 1957, these 'large-horsepower'
development models were subjected to test-runs of up to 15,000 miles,
often covering 800 miles a day on the unforgiving roads of France.
They also clocked up thousands of additional miles in heavy London
traffic and through the British countryside. The EX designation
continues in the modern era, the latest example being the 103EX
electric vision vehicle, unveiled in 2016.
In 1930, Sir Henry Royce began developing a brand-new V12 engine
for a completely new chassis with independent front suspension.
However, his death in 1933 meant he never saw the project through to
completion. The new car, 30EX, was finally ready for road-testing in
November 1934.
As with all innovations, maintaining secrecy around the new V12
engine was commercially critical. Therefore, together with its chassis
number, 30EX was also assigned a codename: ‘Spectre’. Nine
further EX cars, with the ‘Spectre’ codename would follow,
before the car entered production as Phantom III in 1936. Of these
development chassis, seven would later be repurposed for sale to
private customers, who presumably never knew of their motor car’s
previous covert operations. It was the testing and refinement
conducted using these ‘Spectre’ cars that allowed Phantom III
to uphold the marque's reputation, first established by Silver Ghost
in 1907, as “The best car in the world”.
ROLLS-ROYCE SPECTRE (2023-)
Like the EX cars of
the past, the present-day Spectre represents a bold and enormously
significant shift, both technically and philosophically, for
Rolls-Royce. As the first all-electric Rolls-Royce, it marks an
evolution in powertrain technology arguably even greater than the
introduction of the marque's first V12 engine – the configuration,
which after almost 80 years, is still used in every current
Rolls-Royce model.
The Spectre name itself sits alongside Ghost, Phantom and Wraith
as an evocation of silence, refinement and mystery; of something
imagined and dreamlike that exists outside normal parameters and
experience. And though it has previously been given to individual and
experimental cars, no series production Rolls-Royce has worn the
Spectre nameplate until now. This meeting of innovation and continuity
makes Spectre the perfect name choice for a car of such singular and
historic importance.
Torsten Müller-Ötvös, Chief Executive Officer, Rolls-Royce Motor
Cars, says, “There is a pleasing symmetry between the Spectres of the
past and the present-day incarnation. In our history, Spectre is a
name synonymous with technical innovation and development, and
Rolls‑Royce motor cars that go on to change the world. Though
separated by almost a century, both the Spectres of the 1930s and our
own today are the proving-grounds for propulsion technology that will
shape our products and clients’ experiences for decades to come.”