Rolls-Royce Ghost Series II
For those who desire sybaritic luxury and a spirited
driving experience in the same ultra-pricey motorcar, the Ghost Series II is
your answer. Under the hood topped by the Spirit of Ecstasy is a twin-turbo
6.6-liter V-12 good for 563 hp paired to a satellite-aided gearbox, which uses
GPS data to read the roadscape ahead of you, anticipate your driving needs, and
shift the transmission accordingly. The interior boasts sumptuous leather
seating and handsomely crafted wood veneers.
Specifications
VEHICLE TYPE: front-engine,
rear-wheel-drive, 4-5-passenger, 4-door sedan
BASE
PRICE: $291,350/$324,000 (SWB/EWB)
ENGINE TYPE: twin-turbocharged
and intercooled DOHC 48-valve V-12, aluminum block and heads, direct fuel
injection
DISPLACEMENT: 402 cu in,
6593 cc
Power: 563 hp @ 5250 rpm
Torque: 575 lb-ft @ 1500 rpm
Power: 563 hp @ 5250 rpm
Torque: 575 lb-ft @ 1500 rpm
TRANSMISSION:8-speed
automatic
DIMENSIONS:
Wheelbase: 129.7-136.4 in
Length: 212.6-219.3 in
Width: 76.7 in Height:61.0 in
Curb weight (C/D est):5550-5700 lb
Wheelbase: 129.7-136.4 in
Length: 212.6-219.3 in
Width: 76.7 in Height:61.0 in
Curb weight (C/D est):5550-5700 lb
PERFORMANCE (C/DEST):
Zero to 60 mph: 4.7-4.8 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 13.0-13.1 sec
Top speed: 155 mph
Zero to 60 mph: 4.7-4.8 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 13.0-13.1 sec
Top speed: 155 mph
FUEL ECONOMY:
EPA city/highway: 13/20 mpg
EPA city/highway: 13/20 mpg
If you’re truly wealthy, you’re not visiting your
local Rolls-Royce dealership to buy a Ghost, but rather a Phantom, at a price
that starts just above $400,000 but can REQUIRE adding a seventh digit. The
Ghost, while still outrageously expensive at $291,350, is for the merely rich.
To better delineate the difference, let’s paraphrase comedian Chris Rock:
LeBron James is rich; Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert, who signs James’
paychecks, is wealthy.
Recognizing that money can be a sensitive subject in
the wake of increasing income disparity in the United States, Rolls-Royce
executives incessantly throw around the word “entrepreneur” to describe their
Ghost clients. Everyone still loves the myth of the bootstraps.
Other myths punctuate the Rolls-Royce narrative: 60
craftsmen in Goodwood spend some 450 hours laboring over each custom,
hand-finished automobile. Rolls-Royce says that in excess of 85 percent of the
4000 cars it will sell this year are bespoke, which means that if a buyer has a
grove of trees on his estate, for example, he may choose to have some of that
wood included in the interior trim. Or, in the case of Hong Kong billionaire
Stephen Hung, he can just elect to have his wife’s car painted entirely pink.
With this clash between the traditional staid
Rolls-Royce idioms (“Fetch the car, Alfred!”) and the shamelessness of our
global culture, the inconsistency of a proud British firm being owned and run
by the Germans at BMW seems much less important than it did a decade ago. That
the underpinnings of the Ghost are borrowed from a 7-series doesn’t matter;
what does is the option to personalize your fitted umbrella with up to two
canopy colors and a further option for the beading.
Yes, that’s a feature newly available on the 2015
Ghost Series II, one of relatively few changes from what we can now start
calling the Series I Ghost, one of the 2010–2014 models. As inducements to
upgrade go, the Series II is left wanting, although according to Rolls-Royce,
that is by design. Customers who have spent large sums as recently as last
month do not like to be told that their impressive ingot has been made less
impressive by a new one.
Yet this new Ghost is more ingot than before, with a
front fascia that’s been made to look ever so slightly more substantial by
moving the grille higher and emphasizing the character lines on the hood. New
adaptive LED headlights help widen the look of the nose, just as they put Rolls-Royce
back on the lighting-technology lead lap. Similarly, the Ghost Series II sees
its interior electronics updated to use the current iteration of BMW iDrive,
with a Spirit of Ecstasy–festooned controller that supports touch input.
Perhaps recognizing that the Ghost’s ride could use a
little more BMW in it, as well—since the introduction of the Wraith, the
Ghost’s role as the driver’s Roller has been undermined—a firmer suspension
setup is now offered as an option on the standard-wheelbase Ghost SII. While
the retuned settings certainly allow less listing than with the standard
configuration, the Dynamic package is best identified from the driver’s seat by
the thicker steering wheel. Pitching the 5600-pound Ghost into a corner still
results in tire-squealing understeer.
With the exception of the transmission, the rest
of the mechanical package carries over, including the 563-hp, 6.6-liter
twin-turbo V-12. The SII replaces the old ZF eight-speed automatic with
essentially the same transmission, but now it’s wired into the navigation
system so that it can predict when to shift, a setup that first appeared on a
Rolls in the Wraith. Shifts in the Ghost were already a nonevent, so it’s hard
to tell whether this is legitimate technology or an apparition. What’s
indisputable is that the SII Ghost still drives like a Rolls-Royce, wafting
along like a hundred-dollar bill caught in a strong updraft.
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