The Formula E Experience
When I spun a Formula E car off a Swedish racetrack last summer and messily biffed the front wing into the gravel, the folks from Formula E weren’t overly bothered. However, when I later wrote about the experience and remarked that the car was an impressive piece of engineering for a sport no one cared about, they were quite cross. They promptly emailed me a lot of METRICS and FEEDBACK demonstrating that I was, in fact, WRONG. According to them, Formula E is a worldwide household name—a phenomenon bigger than Jesus, with more evangelical followers. Walk down any high street, and you can’t move for kids in full Formula E team kits and queues outside bookies taking punts on the next ePrix.
Extreme E: The Growing Phenomenon
Who would have thought that Extreme E—the off-roading identity crisis world championship designed to “raise awareness of ecological disaster”—is also growing faster than crypto? A recent statement crowed about “a global audience of more than 144 million viewers” and “2.1 billion ‘potential’ impressions and 109.8 million engagements.” Funny that. I had a look at its YouTube channel to save you the bother and the last few race highlights videos have amassed a mighty total of some 6,500 views each.
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The Challenge of Electric Motorsport
Electric motorsport is often criticized. The cars themselves are clever bits of kit, but something—whether it’s the lack of noise, inherent danger, or the whiff of environmental virtue signaling—hasn’t captured the viewing public’s imagination.
Enter Hyundai: The eN1 Cup Car
Who’s going to change that? Hyundai reckons it’s got the minerals. And why not—the Ioniq 5 is one of the most desirable electric cars on sale today and its 642bhp N version is among the most intriguing performance cars in the world right now. What it lacks is competition pedigree. Enter the Hyundai eN1 Cup car. Is this the moment electric motorsport becomes worthwhile?
A New Kind of Racer
We’re not talking about a silhouette racer which only shares headlights with the road-going Ioniq here. This is 90 percent of a showroom Ioniq 5 N. You could probably build your own, if you don’t mind binning all the soundproofing and most of the seats.
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The Specs
- Same Batteries: The eN1 uses the same batteries as the road-going Ioniq 5 N.
- Motors: Same front and rear motors combining for a total of 648bhp.
- Body: Same basic body, albeit inflated with 160mm of wheel arch extensions.
- Interior: Even the dash remains, as do the climate control and USB sockets. First racing car I’ve ever come across that has Apple CarPlay.
The Design Philosophy
Hyundai’s effervescent N Division boss Joon Woo Park explains that they could’ve pushed the envelope harder with the eN1. They could’ve reclothed it entirely in carbon panels, ramped up the motors to north of 700bhp, or 3D-printed a bespoke featherweight cockpit. But that would’ve ratcheted up the cost. Like Jaguar did with its doomed I-Pace ‘support’ series for Formula E which spluttered along for two seasons of ponderous looking £400k SUVs shattering each other’s carbon fiber coachwork.
Affordability
The eN1 is extremely affordable for a proper, pukka, factory-backed, slicked, caged, and winged race car. It’ll be priced at less than £85k when it goes on sale later this year, in South Korea only at first. Even Hyundai’s own Elantra touring car is £124,000, and that’s before you fork out for the pricey engine or gearbox spares and the race fuel an eN1 obviously doesn’t require.
The Advantage of Electric Motorsport
Immediately then, an advantage to e-motorsport is being tapped. It’s cheaper. And that makes it more accessible to more budding racing drivers.
Solving Audience Apathy
But how to solve the problem of nonplussed audiences? This is purely hypothetical of course, as we know in actual fact electric motorsports have a gigantic global audience of faithful ultras and have completely captured the zeitgeist. But just pretend for a moment that this isn’t true and battery-powered racing needs all the help it can get. Imagine.
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The NGB Button: Adding Play Value
Flushed with the positivity towards the heavily augmented Ioniq 5 N, with its synthetic gearshifts, coded-in drift mode, and faux engine noise, Hyundai’s N bods have applied the same thinking to a one-make race series for the eN1, which will kick off in South Korea with a 10-event championship later this year. And cribbed a few ideas from the world of gaming, where the pool of current and future racing drivers spend most of their waking hours. Like the road car, the eN1 features an NGB or ‘N Grin Boost’ button on the wheel. The name still grates, but the principle is sound: adding play value by allowing momentary horsepower surges.
Tactical Racing
In a race, each eN1 will only be allowed five deployments of the NGB button, and never more than once a lap. So tactics come into play—use them early to build a lead, space them throughout the race, or save all your boosts until five laps from the flag and try to win it at the death?
Real-Time Power Adjustments
Power can be given and taken away. Each car will be connected wirelessly to the stewards’ office at race control. Exceed track limits or get a bit bolshy with your paint swapping, and a motor-sapping penalty can be applied to the car live, mid-race. Sod drive-through penalties—just turn down the motor by a few hundred horsepower for a lap or two. Genius. Why hasn’t F1 thought of that? “Sorry Max, you’re too far in the lead and you keep being rude to your engineer so the Red Bull now has half the poke of a Haas. Best of luck.”
Addressing the Noise Issue
And then the big one: noise. The eN1’s speaker isn’t just louder than a 5 N’s—the soundtrack it’ll emit will be bespoke. One of the great joys of a multi-class endurance race like Le Mans is hearing the different engines compete for ear time: rumbling Astons or Corvettes, shrieking Ferraris, and exotic prototypes. A grid full of eN1s should sound like a Star Wars dogfight.
Testing the eN1 at Inje Speedium
Today I’ve got one to play with at the helter-skelter Inje Speedium circuit in the hills of Gangwon-do, about 25 miles as the intercontinental ballistic missile flies from the North Korean border. Bleeping phone alerts warn us of poisonous smog blowing in from China along with the drizzle. Stay indoors. Keep all windows closed. Don’t go outside. Definitely don’t tackle an unfamiliar, sopping wet racetrack in an early build racing car.
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The Driving Experience
But we didn’t come this far just to admire the eN1, which looks fabulously squat, hunkered down with its new muscles on 18-inch rims instead of the road car’s fussy 21s. So Hyundai’s pit crew digs out some wet tires and I splash out onto the circuit to see what I can learn. Is it fast enough? For a touring car, absolutely. Even with most of the cabin stripped out to save 265kg, this remains a two-tonne car, but 650bhp is more than enough. The tires keep catching on the insides of the arches in the scary dips—more compression needed in the new adjustable dampers.
Setting Up the Racecar
But that’s part of the fun of setting up your own race car, and critical in a one-make series where everyone’s going to have identical oomph. The steering’s much faster than the street car, and I leave the shift paddles alone. They’re a giggle in a 5 N, but why would you interrupt your power delivery in a competition car? There’s no drift mode as such anymore, but the power delivery is rear biased and three-stage ESP remains fully on, a little bit off, or zero-nanny hero mode. Grip is massive even in the wet, so you’d soon learn to do without the assistance. The main learning curve is leaving your braking later: the eN1’s AP racing stoppers are ruthlessly powerful. And clever—it’ll keep on harvesting regen during a 0.6g deceleration.
Fun Factor Comparison
Did I have as much fun as I did driving a 5 N road car? Honestly, no. But the road car is designed to be an entertainer foremost, that’s what makes it so refreshing in a world of physics headbutting, one-trick pony EVs.
The Competitive Edge
Naturally, the eN1 is more serious because the entertainment here will come from having 19 other lunatics in identical equipment chasing you for glory. If the Korea series is a success, Hyundai will take it global. Such a pity literally everyone in the world is busy watching the Extreme Formula E eTrophy instead.
By addressing the affordability, tactical racing features, and real-time power adjustments, Hyundai is attempting to make electric motorsport more accessible and exciting. The addition of a bespoke sound system aims to enhance the sensory experience, potentially drawing in more fans. If successful, the Hyundai eN1 Cup car could be a game-changer for electric motorsport, bringing a new level of excitement and engagement to the sport.