Ferrari Luce: an electric car that could have been born in Silicon Valley
A unique behavior
According to Raffaele de Simone, head of development testing at Ferrari, "no one can imagine the dynamism of the Luce. No other Ferrari is capable of what this one does, because each wheel works independently in terms of turning, power delivery, and damping, allowing all the forces to be balanced with surprising efficiency."And then there's another of the project's major challenges: the sound. Because Ferrari knew perfectly well that absolute silence could become an emotional problem for a brand whose identity has always been deeply linked to its internal combustion engines. That's why the Luce doesn't generate an artificial sound like many current electric vehicles do. What it does is amplify and process the real vibrations produced by the electric motors themselves and the mechanical transmission components. The result, according to Ferrari, is intended to be authentic and functional, never synthetic. A sound that accompanies the driving experience without trying to imitate a nonexistent V8 or V12
FERRARI
Ferrari Luce: an electric car that could have been born in Silicon Valley