Skip advert
Advertisement

Ferrari has shown me that EVs can be more than smartphones on wheels

News reporter, Ellis Hyde thinks Ferrari’s take on the electric car formula will deliver something with a longer shelf life than the average EV

Opinion - Ferrari EV

I absolutely love electric cars, and will passionately defend them against most criticism. However, even I still see them more as smartphones on wheels: brilliant but soulless and sometimes buggy pieces of technology, built to be replaced when something newer and shinier inevitably comes along, or they just stop working. But now Ferrari has shown me how it will make an EV as timeless and enduring as any of its sports cars.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Like an exquisite Patek Philippe watch, a Ferrari is designed to last ‘forever’ and ideally be passed down to the next generation. That explains why more than 90 per cent of the cars that the company has made through its illustrious 86-year history are still on the road or part of a collection.

The Ferrari Elettrica will be the first car in the firm’s history to not feature a sonorous combustion engine and a set of glorious red cam covers. But as well as delivering the driving thrills customers expect from a Ferrari, it’s been engineered to “meet Ferrari’s uncompromising approach to building cars that will last forever”. 

How exactly? It’s all to do with the Elettrica’s battery. But not the fact it's an absolutely massive 122kWh, or that it’s been shaped in such a way that Ferrari could give the car a short wheelbase, making it as agile as possible.

Instead, the key thing is that Ferrari chose to use a modular battery pack for the Elettrica. The cell-to-pack approach, which companies such as BYD are also using, can cram in more cells because the battery is a single unit – but having 15 individual modules allows them to be easily serviced and replaced.

Designing the battery this way (not to mention completely in-house) means Ferrari can also upgrade it in the future. For instance, the brand could offer customers solid-state battery modules that unlock more range or weigh less than the nickel-manganese-cobalt ones the Elettrica will use when it launches.

Yes, some electric cars can be improved over time thanks to software updates – yet another thing they have in common with smartphones. But what Ferrari is doing with the Elettrica is on a whole different level, and will help preserve what will be undeniably a key part of the history of this revered company. 

Get even more from Auto Express, follow our channels...
Google
Reddit 
Whatsapp

Skip advert
Advertisement
Ellis Hyde, staff writer Auto Express
News reporter

As our news reporter, Ellis is responsible for covering everything new and exciting in the motoring world, from quirky quadricycles to luxury MPVs, hot hatches and supercars. He was previously the content editor for DrivingElectric and won the Newspress Automotive Journalist Rising Star award in 2022.

Skip advert
Advertisement

Recommended

Best 60s cars: the 35 greatest cars of the 1960s
Best cars of the 1960s - header image

Best 60s cars: the 35 greatest cars of the 1960s

The swinging sixties brought a vast array of unforgettable cars that would establish the path of the industry for decades to come. We pick our top 35 …
Best cars & vans
16 Jun 2026
Citroen's MPV comeback plan is fantastic news for families
Opinion - Citroen MPVs

Citroen's MPV comeback plan is fantastic news for families

Paul Barker explains why Citroen’s potential return to the MPV market is something to get excited about
Opinion
15 Jun 2026
New Ferrari Luce: full details on the 1,000bhp EV and why it “will take time to digest”
Ferrari Luce at Le mans

New Ferrari Luce: full details on the 1,000bhp EV and why it “will take time to digest”

Ferrari’s first-ever electric car looks unlike anything made before in Maranello, because it was styled by the former Apple design boss
News
14 Jun 2026
New BMW M3: M Concept Neue Klasse previews electric iM3 super-saloon
BMW M Concept Neue Klasse - front

New BMW M3: M Concept Neue Klasse previews electric iM3 super-saloon

The M Concept Neue Klasse previews the next chapter for the performance division, which will begin with the electric M3
News
12 Jun 2026

Most Popular

New Land Rover Defender Sport: baby SUV hedges bets with EV and hybrid power
New baby Land Rover Defender render - watermarked

New Land Rover Defender Sport: baby SUV hedges bets with EV and hybrid power

The new Land Rover Defender Sport will sit below the existing Defender in both size and price, and our exclusive image previews how it could look
News
17 Jun 2026
New Honda Super-N 2026 review: little EV is fun and full of character
Honda Super-N and Richard Ingram

New Honda Super-N 2026 review: little EV is fun and full of character

Honda's quirky Super-N is compromised on paper, but in reality it's a fun and efficient small EV
Road tests
19 Jun 2026
New BMW i3 on sale now: electric 3 Series finally ready to take on Tesla Model 3
BMW i3 50 xDrive - front 3/4

New BMW i3 on sale now: electric 3 Series finally ready to take on Tesla Model 3

Are you watching Tesla, Polestar, Audi and Mercedes? The new BMW i3 is here setting new standards with its huge 563-mile range
News
18 Jun 2026

Find a car with the experts