logo
Alpine will use in-wheel motors on the electric A110 and other sports cars

Alpine will use in-wheel motors on the electric A110 and other sports cars

Auto Car27-05-2025
Alpine's upcoming electric sports cars will use in-wheel motors as part of a radical plan to reduce weight below that of an equivalent combustion engine sports car, Renault Group CEO Luca de Meo has confirmed.
'It will change everything,' de Meo said of the APP (Alpine Performance Platform), which has been designed by the premium brand for up to four separate models- including a sports car due next year to replace the A110, previewed on the sidelines of the A390 SUV's unveiling.
In-wheel motors offer a range of benefits to Alpine when trying to package a sports car for the modern era. 'With a motor in the wheels, you have more room for either luggage or footwells, or for sliding your seat backwards or forwards,' Renault Group design head Laurens van den Acker told Autocar. 'The A110 is fine for a weekend but if you want to appeal to a bigger audience, you need more room.'
In-wheel motors have forced the designers to slightly widen the car's body, van den Acker added.
Alpine plans 'three or four' models off the APP platform, de Meo said. Along with a two-seat coupé and a roadster, Alpine will also launch a four-seat Porsche Taycan rival called the A310, which De Meo described as a 'sports sedan'.
The use of in-wheel motors frees up space for Alpine to put the batteries in a different location than the traditional place of under the floor, a format that has proven restrictive for sports cars given the need to force the driver to sit higher.
The aluminium platform will save up to 150-250kg compared to equivalent electric sports cars, according to Alpine, but further details remain under wraps.
Parent company Renault will use in-wheel motors first in the Renault 5 Turbo 3E - a £135,000 electric hyper-hatchback that's due in limited production next year. That car's two rear-mounted in-wheel motors combine to produce a claimed 3540 lb ft of wheel torque. The all-aluminium platform was developed by Alpine, suggesting it previews the APP.
In-wheel motors also allow individual control of separate wheels, known as torque vectoring. Alpine has debuted the technology with its new A390 electric crossover, which uses two inboard motors on the rear of the car.
Issues with in-wheel motors include the extra unsprung weight and the potentially damaging forces put through the motor, for example when the wheel hits a pothole, and the design has yet to make it onto a production car.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

City and United eye Donnarumma - Sunday's gossip
City and United eye Donnarumma - Sunday's gossip

BBC News

time19 hours ago

  • BBC News

City and United eye Donnarumma - Sunday's gossip

Manchester United and Manchester City keen on Gianluigi Donnarumma, Arsenal are hoping to quickly seal £60m deal for Eberechi Eze, and Everton are in talks with Bayern's Adam Aznou. Manchester United and Manchester City are both interested in Paris St-Germain's 26-year-old Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma, with the Ligue 1 side lining up Lille's French goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier, 23, as a potential replacement. (L'Equipe - in French), externalGalatasaray are also set to make an approach for Donnarumma, who is about to enter the final year of his contract in Paris. (Footmercato - in French), externalArsenal are hoping to quickly seal a £60m deal for Crystal Palace's Eberechi Eze, with the 27-year-old England forward keen on a move to Mikel Arteta's side. (Independent), externalEverton are in discussions with Bayern Munich over a £7.8m move for 19-year-old Morocco left-back Adam Aznou. (Athletic - subscription required), externalFlamengo are interested in signing Brazil and Arsenal forward Gabriel Jesus, 28.(RTI Esporte - in Portuguese), externalBenfica are pushing to sign Joao Felix from Chelsea, with the 25-year-old Portugal forward optimistic of completing a return to his boyhood club. (Florian Plettenberg), externalFulham are in advanced talks to re-sign Arsenal's 25-year-old English winger Reiss Nelson, either on loan with option to buy or on a permanent deal (Athletic - subscription required), externalEverton are in talks with Lyon over a deal for 20-year-old Belgium winger Malick Fofana. (Fabrizio Romano), externalThe Toffees have made a bid of about £31m for Fofana, but Lyon want at least £35m. (L'Equipe - in French), externalManchester United and Burnley have joined Brentford, Southampton and Borussia Dortmund in the hunt to sign Metz's 18-year-old Senegal forward Idrissa Gueye. (Sun), externalChelsea are set to subsidise England winger Raheem Sterling's wages in order to complete the 30-year-old's move to Fulham. (Football Insider), external West Ham are considering a move for Werder Bremen's Romano Schmid, who is valued at about £13m. Aston Villa and Fulham are also monitoring the 25-year-old Austria attacking midfielder. (Guardian), externalWest Ham and Benfica are planning to make bids for Cagliari's 24-year-old Italian forward Roberto Piccoli, who is valued at around £26m. (Calciomercato - in Italian), externalLeeds are willing to pay £28m plus add-ons for Feyenoord's Igor Paixao, but face competition from Marseille and Roma for the 26-year-old Brazilian forward. (Sky Sports), external

Belgian GP Sprint result: Oscar Piastri and Max Verstappen duel decided by key decision
Belgian GP Sprint result: Oscar Piastri and Max Verstappen duel decided by key decision

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

Belgian GP Sprint result: Oscar Piastri and Max Verstappen duel decided by key decision

A shrewd Red Bull car set-up decision helped Max Verstappen get the better of McLaren to win the Belgian Grand Prix sprint. Oscar Piastri had started on pole with a monster qualifying lap, but the call to reduce the downforce on Verstappen's car gave the Dutchman the edge. McLaren have had the best race car all season, and it looked to be so again during the twistier sections of the Spa-Francorchamps circuit. But this track also has long straights and that the the opportunity that Red Bull saw. They gave Verstappen a smaller rear wing which reduced his grip in corners but made him lightning quick on the straights, which helped him to take the lead early on. And he had the straight-line speed to keep Piastri behind for the rest of the 15-lap dash and prove he is still determined to succeed with Red Bull. Lando Norris spent most of the race watching team-mate and title rival Piastri try but fail to stop Verstappen. He had been briefly passed by Charles Leclerc, but made light work of getting back ahead of the Ferrari to make it two McLarens in the top three. One of those in contention for points had his chances scuppered before the Sprint even started. Pierre Gasly suffered a water leak on his reconnaissance laps to the grid and that led to his Alpine being wheeled back to the garage so his mechanics could get to work fixing it. It meant the Frenchman missed the start of the race, but he was at least able to head out on lap three. Two laps down, he had no chance of challenging for the top eight, but he was able to at least gather some useful race data which could prove invaluable for Sunday's main event. The 19 cars that did start the Sprint did so safely, no-one willing to risk a big crash at the first corner just a few hours before qualifying for the Grand Prix. Pole-sitter Piastri kept hold of the lead in the opening exchanges, but soon lost it to Verstappen and his high-speed car set-up. Red Bull's decision to use a smaller rear wing to reduce downforce on the Dutchman's car proved to be an inspired decision as, on the long straights at Spa-Francorchamps, he had an obvious pace advantage over the McLarens and used it early on to wrestle control of the Sprint from the Australian. Norris, who started third, also lost a place to Leclerc at the same corner after some hesitant braking. It didn't take the Brit long to get back ahead of the Ferrari, but it was tougher for Piastri who was quicker in the tighter, twistier middle sector struggling to keep up on the straights. He kept Verstappen honest, but was unable to stop the Dutchman from getting back onto the top step of the podium in new boss Laurent Mekies' first race in charge, following Christian Horner's exit. But it was a race to forget for the likes of Lewis Hamilton and George Russell, who were well out of points contention after their respective terrible qualifying results.

F1 car wheeled off Belgian Grand Prix grid minutes before race in huge blow
F1 car wheeled off Belgian Grand Prix grid minutes before race in huge blow

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

F1 car wheeled off Belgian Grand Prix grid minutes before race in huge blow

Alpine's miserable season went from bad to worse at the Belgian Grand Prix when Pierre Gasly suffered a car problem before the Sprint race even began. As a result, his car was wheeled off the grid just 15 minutes before the start of Saturday's short-form race. Gasly had headed out onto the track with the rest of his rivals for his reconnaissance laps of the Circuit Spa-Francorchamps ahead of the first of two races this weekend. The Frenchman would have been eyeing a possible points finish after superbly qualifying eighth on the grid for the Sprint. But he never even got the chance to start after reporting a loss of power while heading to the grid. Alpine called him into the pit lane but Gasly ignored that request, as he pulled up at the back of the grid as usual to be wheeled to his starting spot. His engineers did exactly that, but it soon became clear that the problem was more serious than they had hoped. They took the engine cover off the car and spotted a problem that could not be fixed on the grid, and so the car was wheeled back tot he garage just a few minutes before the start of the Sprint. And the team confirmed shortly after that the car had suffered a water leak issue and that Gasly would not be able to start. The 29-year-old was soon out of his car and looking frustrated as he spoke to team boss Flavio Briatore and his engineers back in the garage. To make matters worse for the team, Gasly's team-mate Franco Colapinto was set to start from the pit lane after changes were made to his car. The Argentine had qualified in the bottom five anyway and so was already unlikely to score points. ---

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store