- Future EVs from Porsche could use simulated gears to boost driver involvement.
- Several high-profile executives from the brand have praised Hyundai N’s fake gears.
- Porsche has also previously said it likes the fake ICE soundtrack of the Ioniq 5 N.
There was a time, not long ago, when the idea of brands like Porsche, Ferrari, Lamborghini, and Mercedes-AMG studying a Hyundai for engineering inspiration would have been absurd, even laughable. That time is over. The electric Ioniq 5 N has forced every serious performance brand to take notes, and several are openly trying to replicate what it does.
It’s been nearly three years since the Ioniq 5 N arrived and reset the bar for performance EVs. Rather than chasing ever-bigger acceleration numbers, Hyundai put the driving experience first. The tool it used was a simulated transmission, engineered by the same team behind the N division’s eight-speed dual-clutch gearbox, that feels close enough to the real thing to fool most drivers.
Read: Hyundai’s Gated Manual Patent Looks Like A Koenigsegg Idea On An Elantra Budget
Porsche has acknowledged it’s tested and looked at Hyundai’s technology, but is not yet ready to commit to launching something similar on any of its EVs.
“We’ll see what happens, but it is not a technology that we do not look at. It’s very interesting. To be honest, Hyundai did a really good job at it,” Porsche product spokesperson Ben Weinberger told Car Sales. “If we do it, it will definitely be a Porsche-typical solution, but it would be too early to talk.”
911 Bosses Like Hyundai’s Solution, Too
Last year, the vice president of Porsche’s 718 and 911 lines, Frank Moster, and the head of Porsche’s GT cars, Andreas Preuninger, both heaped praise on the Ioniq 5 N, acknowledging that they learned a lot after testing it.
“This is the way,” Moser said while speaking about the simulated transmission and the Ioniq 5 N’s fake ICE-inspired soundtrack. “The customer could decide if he wants to drive in complete silent mode, or he wants to be part of the game, feeling the virtual sounds of a flat six and the virtual gear shifts. That would be the direction for the future.”
The all-electric Porsche 718 Cayman and Boxster would be the most logical choices to adopt something similar. But Porsche will also sell both with combustion power, which may give it less reason to engineer (read spend on) the kind of simulated mechanical feel that the Ioniq 5 N thrives on. Why fake gears when real ones could be on the options list? Then again, if the electric 718 shows up feeling sterile next to a three-year-old Hyundai, Porsche will have some explaining to do.
