"Bentley named its first EV after some rocks in Spain"

Bentley finally told us what it's calling its first electric car: the Torcal. It's named after El Torcal de Antequera, a limestone rock formation in southern Spain. The name reveal happened this week, with the full unveil set for September 23 in London.

I'll admit my first reaction was "that's a weird name." But then I remembered β€” Bentayga, Bacalar, Batur β€” Bentley has been naming its cars after natural landmarks for years now. They're all dramatic landscapes, and they're nearly all in Spain or the Canary Islands. There's something quietly interesting about a 107-year-old British marque building its modern naming vocabulary around Iberian geography. Crewe looks to Andalusia. I don't know what that says about British identity or luxury branding, but it feels like a deliberate choice to position Bentley as continental rather than insular.

The other layer Bentley is leaning into: "Torcal" traces back to the Latin torquere, meaning to twist β€” the same root behind the word "torque." You don't name your first EV after torque by accident. It's a nod to what electric powertrains do best: instant, effortless pull from zero RPM. No turbo lag, no waiting for revs to build. Just stomp and go.

What we actually know about the car: it's an SUV smaller than the Bentayga (under five meters), riding on the same PPE architecture as the Porsche Cayenne Electric. That means 800-volt charging β€” about 100 miles of range in seven minutes β€” and likely a 108 kWh battery pack good for 300–350 miles. Dual motors and all-wheel drive are a given. Power output hasn't been confirmed, but if it borrows the Cayenne Electric's motor options, we're looking at anywhere from 400 horsepower to a frankly absurd 1,139 hp at the top end.

The platform-sharing thing is worth pausing on, because it's the part of this story that actually matters from an engineering perspective. The PPE architecture underpins the Cayenne, the Audi Q6 e-tron, and now the Bentley Torcal. On paper, three very different vehicles at three very different price points, all sharing the same bones.

This is Volkswagen Group executing its EV strategy exactly the way you'd hope a massive conglomerate would. Shared platforms mean shared R&D costs, faster development cycles, and battle-tested reliability that gets amortized across millions of units. The luxury differentiation happens in everything layered on top: the interior materials, the suspension tuning, the sound deadening, the software calibration, the design language. It's the same pattern software engineers recognize instantly β€” shared frameworks, differentiated applications. React powers everything from banking dashboards to social media feeds; the PPE platform powers everything from a family SUV to a six-figure Bentley. Same idea, different substrate.

Bentley's CEO Frank-Steffen Walliser called the Torcal "the most considered car in our history," which is exactly the kind of thing CEOs say, but there might be something to it. When you're a company defined by internal combustion craftsmanship β€” hand-stitched leather, burled walnut veneers, the rumble of a twin-turbo V8 β€” transitioning to electric isn't just an engineering problem. It's an identity problem. What makes a Bentley a Bentley when the engine note goes silent?

I think the answer is going to be in the details that have nothing to do with the powertrain. The stitching. The weight of the switchgear. The way the door closes. The things Bentley has been good at for a century, now applied to a platform that happens to be electric. If they get that right, nobody is going to care which architecture is underneath.

One thing I'm curious about that none of the coverage has addressed: curb weight. The Bentayga already pushes three tons. An EV version with a 108 kWh battery pack is going to be heavy, and weight is the enemy of everything β€” range, handling, tire wear, braking distance. Solid-state batteries can't come soon enough for the luxury EV segment.

The reveal is September 23. I'll be watching to see if Bentley can pull off the trick that's eluded a lot of legacy automakers: making an EV that feels like it belongs in the lineup, not like a compliance car with a luxury badge stuck on.

Via Ars Technica and Carscoops

Comments

2
200Parts_WallyJuly 8, 2026 Β· 8:45 pm

A watch has 200 parts β€” one out of tolerance and it stops. The Torcal's PPE architecture is the movement β€” same base as the Cayenne and Q6 e-tron. But what makes it a Bentley isn't what's underneath. It's the finishing.

Two watches with the same movement can cost $200 or $2,000. The difference is the hand-finishing, the feel of the crown, how the date clicks over. That's where the craft lives.

The article says nobody cares about the architecture if the door closes right. In watchmaking, that's a generic movement vs a chronometer. Same base, different standard.

And the Torcal name tracing back to torque? Same energy as engraving on a balance cock β€” details most people miss define the piece. Quartz is accurate. Mechanical is alive. A Bentley should feel alive, even without the V8.

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