Mercedes-AMG’s New EV Acts Like It Has A V8. It’s Way Better Than We Imagined

From InsideEVs.

AMG really went all-out to simulate not only the sound but also the feel of a V-8 in its upcoming EV, and the result is great.

When Mercedes invited us a few weeks ago for a shotgun ride in a prototype of its upcoming all-electric model from AMG, we were more excited than we’ve ever been for a passenger ride.

The prototype is the production version of the AMG GT XX concept—the one with the Bluetooth wheels, designed to rival the Porsche Taycan with up to three axial flux motors that should give it over 1,000 horsepower.

But our passenger ride wasn’t about how quick the C590 prototype is in a straight line. It was all about experiencing its simulated V8 engine experience, which pleasantly surprised us.

What type of sound EVs make when accelerating, or even if they should make any sound at all, is a polarizing topic, but these sounds have been getting better and better as of late.

The current pinnacles of the genre are BMW’s Hans Zimmer-composed spaceship-type sounds, which make you feel like you’re the main character in a sci-fi flick, and Hyundai’s approach. The Korean manufacturer simulates an actual combustion engine, which you can rev in neutral and which has a redline that urges you to shift up, just like in a gas car.

Mercedes-AMG elevates the idea by doing more than just pumping fakery through the speakers. It also uses what are probably resonators in the front seats to make you feel some of the vibration that you would associate with a big V8 mill. The seat subtly vibrates under acceleration in a crescendo as the fake revs build, and when the driver lifts off, you feel the overrun crackle through your spine thanks to the same system.

The engine sound that AMG is trying to simulate is very clearly a naturally aspirated V8 from the time when a 63 AMG car actually had a 6.3-liter engine. It honestly sounds great, and we prefer it to Hyundai’s intentionally artificial-sounding engine in its Ioniq 6 N and Ioniq 5 N.

Just like in those other cars with pretend engines, you don’t have to have the fake engine sound, which you can easily turn off. We’ve seen how much slower having it on makes an EV, so when you want to extract all the performance that the car has to offer, it will likely need to be turned off in the AMG too.

Read more on our site here:
Mercedes-AMG’s New EV Acts Like It Has A V8. It’s Way Better Than I Imagined
https://insideevs.com/reviews/766521/mercedes-amg-ev-simulated-v8/

00:00 – Manufacturers Doing Fake Engine Sounds
01:18 – AMG EV C590 vs Hyundai
01:50 – What AMG Does To Simulate An Engine
02:29 – AMG EV Sound
03:29 – AMG EV C590 Sound Review
04:13 – AMG EV Silent Mode

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