Instant torque is only half the story. Real performance is durability, thermal control and balance — the ability to deliver speed again and again without fading.
Speed That Lasts
Electric motors deliver torque the instant you press the pedal, which is why even modest EVs feel brisk. The challenge isn’t the first launch — it’s the tenth, when heat starts to build.
Our thermal systems hold performance steady, so the car feels as sharp on the last run as the first.

Engineering for Durability
Performance and longevity usually pull in opposite directions. We engineered them to work together — with cooling, materials and software all tuned for the long haul.
- Thermal management: keeps the battery in its sweet spot lap after lap.
- Low centre of gravity: floor-mounted batteries sharpen handling.
- Regenerative braking: recovers energy and extends component life.
Balance and Control
A heavy battery, placed low and central, transforms how a car handles. The result is a planted, confident feel through corners that combustion cars struggle to match.
Adaptive damping reads the road hundreds of times a second to keep the body composed.
“Anyone can build a quick EV. Building one that’s still quick after 200,000 km — that’s the real engineering.”
Marco RossiLead Performance Engineer, Evodrive
Tested to the Limit
Every platform endures the equivalent of years of hard use before it reaches customers — extreme heat, extreme cold, and hundreds of thousands of kilometres — so the performance you feel on day one is the performance you keep.
Comments 4
Durability is the part nobody talks about. Quick is easy; quick after 200k km is the real engineering flex.
2.4s is mad, but the “still quick after 200k km” line is what actually sold me. Fade-free repeatability matters more than a one-off launch.
That’s the whole philosophy, Greg. Thermal headroom is everything.
The low centre of gravity is no joke — took one through a mountain pass and it felt glued down.