Russia Unveils Ghastly New ‘Amber’ Electric Car Prototype And Oh God, It Looks So Awful

Amber Russian Electric Car Topshot
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It feels like it’s been a while since anyone’s shown off a properly unfortunate car. The Youabian Puma is a decade old, the Ssanyong Rodius is ancient now, and even the VinFast VF8 is at least decent to look at. Well, the dry spell ends now. Researchers in Russia have unveiled a new prototype electric car called the Amber, and oh God it’s hideous.

The Amber is a…thing that’s been built by Moscow Polytechnic University as the forerunner for an impending production car. I know we’re pro-car at The Autopian, but this thing seems like an am-car, a thoroughly amateur attempt at motoring that lacks the grace and talent of, well, any other current automaker on the face of this pale blue dot.

It looks like Postman Pat’s red van had angry sex with a G-Wiz, and nine months later, the end result hit every branch of the ugly tree on the way down. It has a panicked face, massive ungainly unbroken surfaces on each bodyside, and it elicits a ton of questions. Why does it sit on its wheels like a wooly mammoth on roller skates? Why does it have two holes on the right side of the body? Why is the bottom of each door two feet off the ground? Did anyone with eyes actually sign off on the styling of the Amber?

Amber Electric Car 2

You might wonder how Russia is managing to build an electric car, considering the sorts of sanctions it’s under right now. Well, major electric drivetrain components like the battery pack, inverter, an electric motor are claimed to be all Russian, a questionable claim when Russia relies on China for lots of electronic things. Allegedly, this car is more about the hardware underneath than the styling, as World Today News reports that ““Avtotor” notes that the future car will look different from the presented test model.” For what it’s worth, the production car will apparently be classified as a heavy quadricycle, so take that information as you will.

When developing a technological testbed, manufacturers tend to move in one of two directions: Either use a lot of effort to produce a near-production spec body that lets engineers actually test efficiency, or put in no effort at all and chop up an existing car as a mule. This prototype seems to have seen some sweat go into making it look positively hideous. Make no mistake, despite the windscreen and side mirrors seemingly sourced from another car, the Amber was styled like this on purpose.

Amber Electric Car 1

As per Russian automotive website Auto, “Production of Amber in Kaliningrad should begin in 2025.” Claims of mass production in 2025 seem dubious, especially if this technological testbed isn’t virtually identical to the finished product. Ford took nearly three years to go from the unveiling of an electric F-150 prototype to the start of F-150 Lightning production, and that thing borrows the bulk of its bodywork from an existing vehicle. To go from something that scares small animals to a production car in about two years? Sure, I’ll believe it when I see it.

Make no mistake, the Amber is a deeply unfortunate vehicle, likely reflecting the terrible conditions that led to its birth. It’s less attractive than an open wound, makes fabulous claims about its technology that most people would be skeptical about, and comes with a bit of backpedaling. Let’s hope the production car looks radically different from the prototype, because it doesn’t seem difficult to do better than this.

(Photo credits: Moscow Polytechnic University)

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130 thoughts on “Russia Unveils Ghastly New ‘Amber’ Electric Car Prototype And Oh God, It Looks So Awful

  1. Y’know, you take that and chop a foot slice out of the middle and it’d look like a funkier EV HHR, but as-is it looks like it just found out it’s allergic to bee stings

  2. It’s the result of a ‘special design operation’. It invades our good taste and makes war to aesthetics. But you’re not supposed to say that out loud.

  3. My guesses on the unknown design elements:

    1) The clips on the front end are there to hold the “hood” in place, and without them the front would fall off. Which would be a HUGE improvement – they might even tow it out of the environment.

    2) The “skateboard” (more like a brick) is some sort of modular platform where they can “clip” a body, like a Lego, going from hatch to sedan to who am I kidding, of course this is just a tall stack of lead batteries!
    3) The hole on the front face is a charger port for the batteries, whatever tech they might be (I’m betting 5,329 single use vape batteries in series).
    4) The hole in the back is for the fuel tank that powers the actual drivetrain hidden in the back. It has an electric powertrain and it moves under its own power, but no one said the two should be connected!

  4. The only reason I can see for the doors starting so high up MIGHT be a way of allowing battery swapping – notice the panels below each door span the whole distance between the wheel arches and appear separate from the panels above. It’s vaguely possible these panels might be designed to give access to a swappable battery under the floor.
    But it’s probably more likely the floor of the designer’s studio is littered with empty vodka bottles.

  5. So much “why” and “just… NO!” on 4 pitiful wheels. There are better ways to fit batteries between running gear and passengers. I like lazy when it’s a synonym for efficient, but this didn’t work out. It’s like someone who could order the rest of the team killed said “the battery pack will be as long and wide as the car to maximize range” and the entire rest of the design was working around that stupidity without question. The wheels have to be that small so there’s room to turn them. Etc.

  6. I think it looks like that because it’s actually two cars, that were conjoined then had bodywork draped over them to make it look like one car. Maybe an ev “skateboard” with something else on top, but either way it wasn’t designed as a single system.

  7. You might wonder how Russia is managing to build an electric car, considering the sorts of sanctions it’s under right now. Well, major electric drivetrain components like the battery pack, inverter, an electric motor are claimed to be all Russian, a questionable claim when Russia relies on China for lots of electronic things.

    This claim may be questionable, but shouldn’t be entirely dismissed, especially considering this is supposed to be a scientific research project. I work with early stage research and I have noticed a growing output of research on EV-adjacent tech from Russian researchers/institutions. And it makes sense that they’re interested in it, especially from an isolationist standpoint: they certainly don’t want to be left behind in this technological shift, and with sanctions in place they have a lot of research to do to come up with their own tech.

    Now, is their science on EV tech any good? No idea, that’s definitely above my pay grade. I am not qualified to make judgements on the contents of any of the hundreds of papers that I scroll through on any given day while helping out these researchers. My educated guess is that they likely face the same type of constraints that scientific research in the Soviet Union faced for much of the country’s existence, so unfortunately a lot of this science may be compromised by political interest.

    1. Right? I’m starting to kinda like it for how stupid it looks. Although I’d take any running/repairable Yugo on the planet over this for the visibility alone. I’d feel claustrophobic driving this thing.

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