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The Viritech Apricale: Britain’s own hydrogen-powered hypercar

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Suggestively-named UK company Viritech has announced that it’s making an altogether different kind of male enhancement supplement than we’d have expected, in the form of a hydrogen-powered hypercar called the Apricale.

Viritech, which is moving into a new engineering facility at Horiba-MIRA in the British Midlands, plans to make hydrogen powertrains its core business, across a bunch of industries including aerospace, marine, energy, road and rail freight. The Apricale is one of three showpieces it’s building in small numbers to demonstrate and draw attention to its capabilities.

It certainly looks like it’ll draw some attention – although mind you, this would have to rank as one of the more conservative zero-emissions hypercar designs we’ve seen. In no way does it scream “HEY EVERYONE LOOK I’M A HYDROGEN CAR,” and that’s a refreshing change, even if it might end up being a tad anonymous parked out the front of a Monte Carlo hotel.

While not much has been released about the Apricale’s powertrain, Autocar is suggesting a peak power around 1,100 hp, presumably out of a large fuel cell, buffer battery and AWD electric powertrain.

Sorry, you have to pay extra if you want that chunk of the car back
Sorry, you have to pay extra if you want that chunk of the car back

Viritech

Viritech’s secret sauce, which it plans to prove in the Apricale, is its structural pressure vessels. Essentially, the company says it’s building a super-lightweight graphene composite monocoque frame for the car that incorporates hydrogen storage the way many battery-electric vehicles now incorporate their battery packs. The benefits: super-tidy packaging without great big cylinders to plan around, and a significant weight reduction as compared to cars with bolt-on hydrogen cylinders.

The range of the car is as yet unknown, but it’s fair to expect it’ll be huge compared to battery-electrics. The only other hydrogen hypercar we’ve seen thus far, the eye-popping Hyperion XP-1, promises more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km) on a tank. As we mused when we wrote about that one, you’ll probably want long ranges as an early adopter of hydrogen; you can’t charge it at home like a battery car, and there are currently just 14 hydrogen fuel stations in all of the UK.

Viritech says it’s going to develop the Apricale over the next 18 months, with a limited production run of 25 cars beginning in early 2023. The company is also working on “reference designs” a family-style SUV called the Tellurio, as well as a heavy-haul truck called the Jovian. Long-haul trucking is likely a better market for the company, since batteries won’t be able to handle super-long distance trucking as well as hydrogen, even if they’re clearly superior right now for the vast majority of passenger car use cases.

The Jovian would also run a structural hydrogen storage system... Although in this case it does kinda look like a bunch of tanks in the chassis
The Jovian would also run a structural hydrogen storage system… Although in this case it does kinda look like a bunch of tanks in the chassis

Viritech

The new engineering center’s location may prove valuable here; among many OEMs and tier one suppliers at the Mira Technology Park is the new facility for Israeli company REE, which makes super-flat electric vehicle chassis and wheel modules with a dizzying range of performance, function and specification options.

REE has just signed a joint chassis design deal with Toyota’s Hino trucking subsidiary, as well as partnership deals across a range of different component suppliers. If Viritech’s structural hydrogen powertrain design is the real deal, it’d certainly seem like an opportunity to develop a super-flat hydrogen-powered chassis that could extend REE’s extraordinarily versatile platform into markets that will need the long-range capabilities offered by hydrogen.

Viritech also says it’s working on reference designs for hydrogen fueling stations, portable, modular hydrogen generators, and even a zero-emissions hydrogen-powered helicopter. Thats a particularly interesting idea, because such a thing could offer mission capabilities outside the range of what the new generation of eVTOLs can deliver: heavy lift might be possible, for example, as well as long duration missions involving a lot of hovering, which would chew through the battery-powered, small-rotor eVTOLs’ energy reserves way too quickly.

The doors go up, so they've clearly nailed that bit
The doors go up, so they’ve clearly nailed that bit

Viritech

Either way, the Apricale is a spunky looking piece of unobtanium for the ultra-rich, but the structural storage tech behind it has the chance to make some real impact over the coming years. One to watch.

Source: Viritech

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Source: https://newatlas.com/automotive/viritech-apricale-hydrogen-hypercar/

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