Denmark’s Only Supercar Has An 1850 HP Bespoke V12 Engine And Gauges That Physically Flip From Analog To Digital

Zenvo Aurora Top
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Quick, what are the two things you think of first when you hear “Denmark?” If you’re like most people, you think of those round metal cans that pretend to hold cookies but really hold sewing supplies, and then maybe you think of, I don’t know, Hamlet. But what you likely don’t think of are supercars, because, generally, the Danes haven’t exactly been cranking those out. But, that may be changing, because while at Pebble Beach this year we got to see, as is tradition, at least one wildly over-the-top supercar, only this time that supercar was from Denmark. It’s called a Zenvo Aurora, and we got to check one out and talk to Zenvo’s bigshot Jens Sverdrup about just what we were looking at.

Auroras

Generally, I don’t really know what to do with supercars. They’re often beautiful and technically wondrous things, pushing the limits of design and technology and, hell, sometimes even physics. But they’re also so rare and wildly expensive and the ones that do get sold tend to hardly be driven at all, living their inert lives in climate-controlled storage. They’re so far removed from the world I inhabit, I just can’t get that excited about them. It’d be like going to a museum and falling in love with the statue of some ancient god; sure, you can see objectively why it could happen, but it’s fundamentally an exercise in uselessness.

And, look, if I’m absolutely, painfully honest, I still feel that way! If I’m going to be really, really honest I have to tell you that Matt really wanted me to write this up, to frame the little video/interview we shot, and I’m happy to do that, because the interview is great, and I know Beau really enjoys and appreciates these cars, so it’s great to see him all excited about it.

Really, there’s a lot to be excited about: just the fact that the company is developing their own bespoke V12 engine is remarkable enough! In this era of transition to EVs, it’s very likely that that could be the last new V12 to be developed, ever? Could that be? Perhaps another niche maker might come up with one, but at the moment, I think the V12 being developed for this car has a good claim on being at least one of the last.

Zenvov12

Zenvo is partnering with MAHLE Powertrain to develop the engine, so it’s not like they’re trying to figure out everything on their own. The engine is going to be a 6.6-liter quad-turbo that should make an I guess adequate 1250 horsepower at 8,000 RPM, and can rev to a motorcycle-seeming 9,800 RPM if you’re, say, towing a moon. The drivetrain is planned to be a hybrid, so there’s also a 600 hp electric motor for that absurd total of 1850 hp.

You’ll also be happy to note in the video we did ask about any potential conflict with Oldsmobile about the use of the name “Aurora.” Jens seemed pretty confident that it’s not a problem since Oldsmobile is very, very dead, but their parent GM isn’t, so I am mildly curious if they’re going to have to cut some sort of deal. Also, the logo for the Zenvo Aurora and the old Olds Aurora aren’t all that different, really:

Aurora Logos

I mean, look at those Rs! Sure, it’s a bit more canted rightwards and they’ve eliminated the crossbars from the As, likely for weight reasons, but we’re not talking about a radically different look, here. Maybe they need to be a bit careful.

If we accept that every car has a punctum, some sort of key detail that encapsulates the essence of it, then I think for the Zenvo it might be the mechanically-flipping round dials on the dash, which have digital LCD screens on one side and mechanical analogue gauges on the other. If there’s any part to pause and re-watch in the video, that’s the bit, because it’s a very cool party trick, and if I were on Zenvo’s engineering team, it’s the little motors that do the gauge-flipping I’d spend the most effort on, because those will likely rack up more miles than any other part.

Gaugeflip

It’s very satisfying. And it’s also the smallest CarPlay screen I’ve seen, but I think it should be usable enough? I mean, really, who cares, you’re just going to be flipping these things around all the time, anyway.

Here, you need a GIF of it:

These Auroras are striking designs, full of improbable gaps and visible components and doors that open in exciting ways and are, really, every inch a supercar, whether they’re Danish or not. It’s exceedingly unlikely I’ll ever get to drive one of these or perhaps even interact with one again, and my work puts me in more positions to possibly do so than you’d think. So, for all of you that adore supercars, I can happily say this Zenvo Aurora absolutely seems to be a fine example of this rarified breed.

As for me, though, I’m more excited to figure out when I could possibly import a first-gen Citroën Cactus to America. And I’m fine with that.

56 thoughts on “Denmark’s Only Supercar Has An 1850 HP Bespoke V12 Engine And Gauges That Physically Flip From Analog To Digital

  1. The engine is going to be a 6.6-liter quad-turbo that should make an I guess adequate 1250 horsepower at 8,000 RPM, and can rev to a motorcycle-seeming 9,800 RPM if you’re, say, towing a moon. The drivetrain is planned to be a hybrid, so there’s also a 600 hp electric motor for that absurd total of 1850 hp.

    Is the mistake here Jason’s or is the company actually quoting 1850 HP? Because if it’s the latter I suddenly find I have a lot of skepticism about this.

    The flipping gauges are cool though.

      1. But that’s not how it works, unless they’re quoting peak HP from the electric motor at the same RPM as the ICE peak, which nobody does. Peak HP from a hybrid system is never just the peak HP of both power sources added together.

  2. This is twice I’ve seen this engine, and I have questions.. I’m seeing “reverse” flow, as in the exhaust is in the V and intake on the outside, OK, feeds the 4 turbos well. However what do the turbo inlet pipes looks like, not to mention the dumps? The rear 2 turbos seem to have exits, the front two, have um, weird bulbus things. Are they feeding back to the rear turbos?

    1. Same question here. I am guessing the front two (I’m assuming the front is to our left) exit beneath the rear two. The promotional video I found while searching for more info on the engine was pretty cringey to me-wolves and water ripples and force-of-nature suggestions that didn’t appeal to me at all.

      But, at 4 million before customization, I’m not the intended audience

        1. Great comment!
          -especially as I happened to hear earlier that NFTs are essentially worthless. 4 out of 5 collections remain unsold. Little schadenfreude here, yeah…

  3. Also, the logo for the Zenvo Aurora and the old Olds Aurora aren’t all that different, really:

    The ‘Au’ in the hypercar’s name is a dead ringer for the Autopian logo text. Just saying.

    And Denmark is the land of Lego, bacon, and kings who’s name you have to be very careful to spell correctly. (Cnut)

      1. You’ve kept one running? Good for you! First or second gen?

        My dad bought an emerald green ’95 with the Autobahn package off lease in ’97. It did not go well. That thing was pretty constantly in the shop. Mom traded it in for a new Bravada while we were on vacation in early 2001, and never let dad buy her a car again.

        I got to drive it a few times, and was impressed with how quick and how well such a big front wheel drive sedan could handle.

  4. “and mechanical analogue gauges on the other”

    Are they really mechanical though, or just digitial converted to a physical gauge like most modern gauges?

    It would be interesting if they are truly mechanical as the gauges would continue to work when they are backwards (and upside down). Unless they are somehow uncoupling the cables that drive the gauges when they turn around.

  5. So nice to know that V12 engines are still trucking on in spite of evil eyes of soulless, faceless, nameless EU technocrats and the useless Euro 7 emission regulations. Pity that Mercedes-AMG and Mercedes-Benz ditched the V12 for its S-Class, leaving the V12 exclusivity to Mercedes-Maybach S 680.

    Still looking for the wrecked S 680 so I could transplant the V12 engine into my S 580…

              1. Still hassling me because you don’t like what I enjoy in my life and don’t like my “sassy” mouth? What’s the matter with you? Can’t stand seeing others being successful in their lives while your life is heinously cheap and crappy? Perhaps you need to start reading the books such as Millionaire’s Mind, Think and Grow Rich, and How to Win Friends and Influence People. That’d be a cheap start for you, bastard.

                Engine swapping has been done for decades. Some are done for free or fun while others are done out of necessity.

                Mercedes-Benz S 580 4Matic and Mercedes-Maybach S 580 4Matic/S 680 4Matic are more or less the same car except for the length, rear passenger doors, and C-pillar. Both have the same engine bay, and it’s more of plug-and-play without any extensive rework as you assumedly believed.

                Get a life, Cheap Bastard.

  6. This is the first time I’ve ever actually seen something Mahle worked on. I’ve always knew them as the sponsor under Moog on the front fender of racecars.

  7. Didn’t these guys sue TopGear when their old car caught on fire during a review? Also how could you forget about Lego as a great Danish contribution to the world?

      1. I used to live in Tasmania which is full of Danes, at least at the university, (the crown princess of Denmark is from Tasmania). I have several great Danish friends and was supposed to visit for the first time a few weeks ago, but had to cancel due to a death in the family. All that to say the Danes I know are awesome, their city planning is awesome, and it’s a country I’ve always wanted to visit.

  8. I don’t know if it’s because my family’s Danish and I’m one of the few to make this association, but skipping right by Lego? I bet the engineering team even has a set of flipping gauges mocked up in Technic.

  9. Ah yes, supercars. Where you can do fake math to get 1,850 horsepower by wrongly adding electric motor and ICE power ratings, but the car will never be driven enough for anyone to notice.

    1. Well when you max the electrics 600hp at idle yet the gas engine is making 200hp, and when the gas engine is making 1200+ above 8000rpm the electric motor will have fallen down from 600hp to 150ish.

      It never at one time is ever making more than 1300ish at any given time.

      Most arent smart enough to know that.

      1. I’d wager that anybody buying these could not care any less about if the number is real, as long as it’s bigger than the number slapped on that other rich jerks car down the street.

    2. I mean….my 2012 Prius v supposedly has “134 combined horsepower” (I can find one source saying the ICE is 98 of that.) Should I not reference the 134 if asked? (…as if I’ll get asked power spec questions about a Prius, but that’s just as hypothetical as owning a supercar.)

      1. The difference is that Toyota (correctly) doesn’t simply add up the peak power ratings of the 98 hp gas engine and the 80 hp electric motor and claim your Prius has 178 hp.

        The maximum the two power sources can produce *at the same time* is 134 hp.

        The same principle will be true with this car; there is zero chance it will ever produce 1850 hp.

        1. Interesting! Had no idea the electric motor’s peak was 80 hp…do you have a source for that? I see the 98 hp for the ICE on multiple sites and the 134 total on multiple as well.

          1. I just got it from Wikipedia, I can’t vouch for its accuracy beyond that.

            The general idea is correct for every hybrid I’ve ever seen though. The electric motor peak power and the gas motor peak power are not going to be at the same time, so when one is maxed, the other is making less than peak power.

    3. It’s a matter of design goals, right? I mean, most hybrids are focused on efficiency and that usually means offsetting the power peaks to let the ICE spend as much time as possible in the most efficient range (and not have to build the downstream drivetrain to deal with full combined torque), but it’s also totally possible to design a hybrid for maximum performance where the peaks line up. No idea if Zenvo did that, but the Porsche 918, McLaren P1, and LaFerrari all seem to have power peaks very close to the sum of ICE+electric.

  10. What’s that gesture made at the gauge after it turns digital and before it starts flipping back to analog? Does the guy tap on it to make that happen?

  11. I’m kinda meh on super-hyper-mega-gigamobiles anymore: Top Gear ruined me a decade or more back. The picture of the engine caught my eye, though: looks like a hot-V. What I can’t quite sus out is which end we’re looking at: is the front on lower left, and power outputs at the end we can’t see? And, the two turbos at left—do they exhaust under the turbos to the right?

    Ok: the flipping gauge is cool. The commercial for the car (found when googling the engine) is a bit over the top, though

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