Filed under:
Coupe,
Hybrid,
Performance,
Mercedes-Benz,
Luxury
The recent
Geneva Motor Show was a festival of hypercars, with the presence of not one, but three over-the-top debuts: the
Lamborghini Veneno,
McLaren P1 and
Ferrari LeFerrari. The latter two have hitched their carbon fiber bumpers to the electrification bandwagon by using hybrid-electric powertrains not entirely unlike the propulsion systems we've come to know in cars like the
Toyota Prius and
Chevrolet Volt. Does that mean the flow of electrons up the four-wheeled food chain will eventually consume our hallowed supercars? Not if
AMG has anything to say about it.
AMG Director of Vehicle Development Tobias Moers recently confirmed that not only will there be a successor to the Mercedes-Benz performance division's
SLS AMG, he notes that its internal combustion engine will most definitely not be sharing living quarters with an electric drivetrain. Instead, AMG plans to focus on further pushing the power and efficiency envelope of the internal combustion engine and advancing the use of lightweight materials to achieve their goals. The first example of this effort can be seen in the new
SLS AMG Black Series that incorporates many weight-saving techniques to shed some 154 pounds from the
SLS AMG GT (above), which itself is lighter than the standard SLS AMG.
Furthermore, Moers remarks that his company is happy to leave the hypercar segment to companies like
Ferrari and
McLaren. He admits that, "Ferrari in the hyper-car segment is still a different brand than AMG. We have to be honest..." So rather than taking the SLS further upmarket to do battle with bulls and stallions, Moers hinted that the next-generation SLS may be joined by another performance model that fits neatly between itself and the
C63 AMG.
Mercedes rules out hybrid supercar, promises SLS successor originally appeared on
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