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First Look: Porsche’s first all-electric “Cup” car promises emissions-free speed

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First Look: Porsche’s first all-electric “Cup” car promises emissions-free speed

First Look: Porsche’s first all-electric “Cup” car promises emissions-free speed

Porsche EV Cup car.

Porsche EV Cup car. Photo by Porsche

I suppose it was only a matter of time. After all, Volkswagen – the Group, not the specific automaker — has made no bones about its complete conversion to electric vehicles. VW — the automaker this time, not the Group — is, in an effort for redemption after Dieselgate, totally committed to electric vehicles. Likewise, Audi is being extremely aggressive about electrification and Porsche is the first legacy automaker looking Tesla straight in the eye, its Taycan taking on Silicon Valley Model S head on.

The advantage of being Porsche is that you have multiple profit channels, just one of which happens to be building customer racecars. Whether they be street legal track cars (the GT2) or racing-only homologations specials (GT3 Cup) or track-focused cars with no specific racing purpose (like the 2019 935) other than letting rich wannabes pretend they’re Patrick Dempsey, Porsche make s^!tloads of money selling cars designed to circumnavigate closed course racing circuits as quickly as possible. There are no less than 30 one-make racing series around the world running some form of “Cup” car.

And soon there will be an electric version.

Oh, for now the company is calling this first look a concept, but let there be little doubt that sometime in the near future, Weissach will be producing all-electric race cars for future one-make series that look very much like this Mission R.

There will be a caveat here, of course. That 15-minute charge only gets you a 75 per cent charge — more specifically from 5 to 80 per cent state of charge (SoC) — which means that for every 22 minutes of racing, you’ll have to stop for a 15-minute recharge. Mission Rs, it seems, will face the same problem as all EVs do — they can go fast or they can go far, but they can’t do both. In other words, there will be no endurance racing EVs for the time being, even if they are massively powered Porsches.

That said, the Mission R will make a great single-make Cup racer. Porsche has already proven, with the Turbo S version of its ginormous Taycan, that it can make electric power track worthy. Packaging all that goodness into a dedicated racecar that is shorter, wider and lower than a Cayman R with all the aerodynamic benefits that an electric platform engenders pretty much guarantees it will be an absolute weapon on the track. Driving will be amongst the first to sample the Mission R. It can’t arrive soon enough.

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