E-Legend's electric EL1 homage to Audi Sport Quattro S1 nears production

E-Legend's electric EL1 homage to Audi Sport Quattro S1 nears production

Two years ago, German outfit E-Legend went public with plans to create an electric homage to the Audi Sport Quattro S1. The renderings showed a battery-powered coupe bearing the familiar silhouette of the celebrated Group B rally car, with exaggerated takes on the Audi’s already-exaggerated features like the swollen wheel arches and power bulge hood. The EL1 updates the design with neat flourishes like the NACA-duct-shaped glass panel in the roof illuminating a sumptuous cabin. The production version is getting closer, E-Legend taking one of its carbon fiber monocoques to an airfield for a fine-tuning session of drifting and donuts. We know how specs can dramatically change from conception to production, but the performance specs match or outdo the targets: 805 horsepower and 848 pound-feet of torque from three e-motors of asymmetric output, 0-62 miles per hour in 2.8 seconds, and a top speed of 186 mph. Of those sums, torque is up 74 lb-ft.

For any who don’t know, a series of Audi Sport cars simply named “Quattro” won two WRC tiles, in 1982 and 1984. E-Legend has chosen one of the most iconic models to emulate, but the least successful, the Audi Sport Quattro S1. That might have something to do with E-Legend’s founder, Marcus Holzinger, being the son of Wolfgang Holzinger, a modeler at Audi in the early 1980s who worked on the Audi Sport Quattro’s lines. The S1 version won a single rally, the San Remo event in 1985 with Walter Röhrl at the wheel, and zero championships. The classic model made about 476 hp and 354 lb-ft from a turbocharged 2.1-liter inline-five-cylinder engine and weighed roughly 2,580 pounds.  

See also  Airline Fined $225,000 After Police Had to Free Passengers From Flight in Florida

The prototype is still being worked up to its target figures and final equipment spec, though. At the moment, the pre-pro version makes 604 horses from its two 302-hp rear motors. When everything is cranked up, the ultimate plan is to have the front motor contribute a further 201 hp, the torque split about 280 lb-ft from the front motor and about 247 lb-ft from each of the rear motors. Power’s sent through an open diff now, production cars should get a mechanical limited-slip differential on the rear axle and maybe one up front, too.    

The biggest diversion from the 2021 spec concerns the battery and curb weight. The original spec sheet included a 90-kWh T-shaped battery behind the cockpit, the transverse portion meant to keep weight centered 43/57 front-to-rear. The battery capacity’s been shrunk to 80 kWh; despite that, curb weight is up. E-Legend planned for the car to weigh 3,700 pounds, that’s climbed to 3,950 pounds. Nothing that 805 hp and 848 lb-ft should have trouble moving, though. Maximum charging speed is also down, from 300 kW to 200 kW.

E-Legend’s put the production run for the EL1 at 30 units, each starting at 890,000 euros ($949,000 U.S.). The price includes that sensational looking interior as well as features like power windows, air conditioning, parking sensors, and a rear-view camera. The plan is to show the production version at the 2024 Monterey Car Week. E-Legend says it’s already conceiving its follow-up product, another rally legend that will become the EL2. If you don’t want want to wait, remember that E-Legend isn’t the only outfit hand-building beautiful resurrections of WRC icons. The car that interrupted Audi’s WRC triumphs was the Lancia 037, and if you’re ok with internal combustion, the Kimera Automobili 037 is a gorgeous bit of mobile art you can buy right now.

See also  Demystifying insurance for SMEs

Related video: