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Jason Momoa’s 584-HP electric Rolls-Royce Phantom II is all sorts of awesome

Rolls-Royce is perhaps the one brand in the world for which electrification makes perfect sense. Right from the very beginning, exacting engineer Henry Royce prided himself on creating cars that were smoother and quieter than anything else on the road. Today’s Rolls-Royce Spectre, which is wafted along by two electric motors producing a total of 584 hp, is a silkily silent Rolls of which Mr. Royce would rightly approve.

Against that background, the decision by AquamanDune, and Fast X star Jason Momoa to replace the 7.7-liter straight-six engine in his 1929 Rolls-Royce Phantom II with an electric motor is less an act of automotive heresy than it might seem. Indeed, it could be argued the stately 95-year-old Phantom, which features original coachwork by HJ Mulliner & Co, has been given a new lease of life that is absolutely on-brand and will allow it to be regularly driven well into to its second century.

A bespoke conversion for a stately subject

The conversion has been done by British firm Electrogenic, whose electric-powered Jaguar E-Type roadster impressed us when we drove it last year. Electrogenic specializes in EV conversions of classic cars that don’t interfere with the original vehicle’s structure, meaning the cars can be reconverted back to ICE power if needed, and they retain their value.

In addition to cleverly engineered “plug and play” EV conversions for the E-Type, old Land Rovers and Minis, Triumph Stags and early Porsche 911s, Electrogenic will design and engineer bespoke conversions for almost any classic vehicle. With past bespoke projects such as a Citroën DS conversion that retained the car’s unique hydro-pneumatic suspension, Electrogenic was the perfect fit for the Phantom II project, said Jason Momoa.

Jason Momoa electric Rolls Royce Electrogenic Goodwood Revival

Six out

Electrogenic has replaced the Phantom II’s massive straight-six, which despite its size made less than 50 hp, with a single 201 hp e-motor mounted where the original non-synchromesh four-speed manual transmission was located. The e-motor drives the rear wheels via a fixed reduction gear that increases its 229 lb-ft torque output to 738 lb-ft at the prop shaft. The motor is fed by a 95-kWh battery pack developed by Electrogenic that is mounted between the original frame rails and under a hand-formed, hand-riveted cowl that sits upright under the long center-hinged hood where the engine used to be.

What has been preserved

Jason Momoa’s Phantom II is far from simply an electric-powered Rolls-Royce restomod — old on the outside, all-new on the inside. Electrogenic has, for example, preserved the original mechanical, “through-flow” chassis lubrication system that was originally designed to send oil to the car’s many phosphor-bronze bushes for brake and suspension linkages, as well as other mechanical control systems, to ensure it drove smoothly and quietly.

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