Skip to main content

Maserati is balancing the past and the future to reinvent all of its cars

Ronan Glon

Maserati is deeply-rooted in its 105-year history, and it’s justifiably proud of its past, so I was surprised to hear Joe Grace, its head of product, use the word “terabytes” during a presentation at its headquarters. The Italian firm is preparing to write the next chapter in its story, and that plot is so focused on technology that it may as well be written in code.

Grace and his team face the delicate task of balancing Maserati’s heritage — which includes race cars like the emblematic Tipo 61, better known as the Birdcage, and luxury sedans like six generations of the Quattroporte — with the trends influencing the automotive industry as the 2020s loom. These trends are well-known: Customers have an insatiable appetite for connectivity, while governments are asking for cleaner — and, preferably, electric — cars.

Maserati’s decision-makers have their finger on the tech industry’s pulse. They’re monitoring how customers react to different features, and weighing the pros and cons of migrating away from hardware to software. It’s nearly impossible to design an interior without a screen, but should every single button, knob, and switch be replaced by one? The jury is still out. An over-the-air updating system is mandatory, however, so it’s a feature that future Maserati models will offer.

Grace told Digital Trends his team mines valuable information from the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES). It’s like a weather vane that indicates which way the wind is blowing in the fast-moving tech industry.

Technology is increasingly influencing how the company develops cars, too. The innovation lab Maserati operates near its hometown of Modena, Italy, is packed with various simulators that cut down the amount of time needed to develop a new model, and the cost of bringing a car to the market. One is a car-sized device mounted on huge articulated arms that replicate the movements of a car. It’s installed in a dark room surrounded by giant screens that look like they come from a movie theater. It’s here that much of the fine-tuning happens. The simulator is linked to the company’s research and development department via an ultra-quick internet connection, so engineers can dial in a parameter — like a throttle response, for example — and immediately send it to the simulator so that it can be tested. Luca Dusini, Maserati’s head of vehicle dynamics testing and simulation, told Digital Trends that members of his team are able to test 40 different setups in one day, which would be impossible without an armada of software and hardware. This is particularly important as Maserati prepares to leap into the electric car arena. The firm knows how to tune an excellent V8, but EVs are a new ballgame.

Real-world testing remains indispensable, and that’s where the terabytes come in. Maserati’s intrepid, world-traveling test drivers put about three million miles on prototypes annually, and extract an astounding 40 terabytes of data which gets analyzed and fed into the simulators to make them more realistic. Professional race car driver Andrea Bertolini helps Maserati’s vehicle development team in the lab and on the track, and he said there’s a 90-percent correlation between, say, the Nürburgring track in Germany and the digital version Maserati dialed into its simulator. Testing cars on a simulator might sound like playing Gran Turismo Sport with world-class hardware; it’s not. “It’s virtual life, not a big game,” he explained.

Maserati’s product portfolio will look completely different in 2023 than it does in 2019.

Maserati will pack the technologies it’s developing into a new range of cars it will gradually release between 2020 and 2023. The product offensive will begin during the 2020 Geneva Auto Show when the company introduces a two-door sports car (yes, those still exist) we recently saw as a heavily-camouflaged test mule. The GranTurismo and GranCabrio will be replaced in 2021 and 2022, respectively, and the company is busily working on a second SUV that will slot below the Levante.

All of its future models will be available with an electric powertrain, the company recently announced. Without simulators, designing a full range of models would take years, and require billions of dollars. They’re such time-savers that, if all goes according to plan, Maserati’s product portfolio will look completely different in 2023 than it does in 2019.

Topics
Ronan Glon
Ronan Glon is an American automotive and tech journalist based in southern France. As a long-time contributor to Digital…
This $3 USB adapter fixed all of my Apple CarPlay connection problems
iPhone with USB-C cable and USB-A adapter.

I bought a new Jeep last year and was obviously adamant that it had CarPlay. It was also the first car I owned with a touch screen for CarPlay, which is a nice change of pace. But in the first couple of weeks of driving, I was increasingly frustrated: even though I was using a wired USB connection, my CarPlay kept disconnecting. Sporadically, and frequently.

I tried different phones. I tried using an official Apple Lightning cable -- USB-A and USB-C, as my car has both -- as well as various styles and lengths of third-party cables. Nothing worked. And then, I found an inexplicable fix: using a simple USB-A to USB-C adapter, which is just $9 for a three-pack .

Read more
Ram EV concept previews truck brand’s electric future
The Ram 1500 Revolution BEV concept was designed around an electric powertrain.

Electric pickup trucks are a hot trend in the auto industry, and Ram is late to the game. So the truck brand of massive automaker Stellantis needed to work hard to stand out.
Unveiled at CES 2023, the Ram 1500 Revolution BEV concept shows what Ram has in mind for its first production electric truck, which is scheduled to arrive in 2024. This concept version combines some features we’ve already seen on other electric trucks with a few clever new ideas. So while it may be revolutionary for the Ram brand, which is new to EVs, it’s more evolutionary when compared to other electric pickups.

Unmistakably electric
The Ram 1500 Revolution has the bulky appearance of a traditional truck, but with proportions that clearly mark it as an EV. With no need to accommodate an engine, the hood is much shorter. This allowed designers to make the cabin four inches longer than today’s internal-combustion Ram 1500 without shortening the bed, Ram claims. The grille is also smaller, although Ram compensated for this with a giant light-up logo and headlights with the same “tuning fork” elements as its current gasoline and diesel truck grilles.
The roofline is a bit lower and sleeker, which probably helps with aerodynamics, but like a traditional truck, the Revolution rolls on massive wheels and tires. The 35-inch tires are wrapped around 24-inch wheels with smooth covers and light-up elements. The charge port, meanwhile, is located in the driver’s side front fender. It makes a noise when the truck has started charging and blinks to show that charging is ongoing.
Like rival truck makers, Ram incorporated a frunk where the engine would normally be, plus the RamBox storage bins from its current trucks. Nearly every opening, including the tailgate, frunk, and charge port, is also power-operated.
Underpinning all of this power-operated convenience is the STLA Frame dedicated EV platform, one of four such platforms Stellantis plans to use for future EVs across its many brands, such as Chrysler and Jeep.

Read more
The Sony Honda Afeela car is peak CES, and I’m totally here for it
Yasuhide Mizuno, representative director, chairman and CEO of Sony Honda Mobility Inc., introduces the Afeela EV.

Everyone knew what was coming. Sitting a half-dozen rows back at the Sony press conference the afternoon before the CES show floor actually opened, you could tell by the layout of the booth — drastically different from what Sony had in previous years — that something big was going to be wheeled out.

That something, of course, was a car. It wasn't a big secret. Folks were talking about it on the bus ride to the Las Vegas Convention Center from the Mandalay Bay Convention Center, where a good chunk of the work happens before the CES doors are open. Folks were talking about it — in all sorts of languages — in the long line down the hallway that separates two of the bigger halls at the LVCC. English. Japanese. Spanish. So many others. And you didn't have to actually know what they were saying to know what they were talking about.

Read more