A closer look at the insane 1400hp, 7-motor Ford Mustang Mach-E

A closer look at the insane 1400hp, 7-motor Ford Mustang Mach-E

A closer look at the insane 1400hp, 7-motor Ford Mustang Mach-E


This article was originally published by Michael Coates on Clean Fleet Report, a publication that gives its readers the information they need to move to cars and trucks with best fuel economy, including electric cars, fuel cells, plug-in hybrids, hybrids and advanced diesel and gasoline engines.

Ford is clearly focused on not just producing an electric car that is designed for calm commutes and hands-free driving, but delivering some excitement along with the electricity. Enter the all-electric Mustang Mach-E 1400 – a one-of-a-kind prototype developed in collaboration with RTR Vehicles to demonstrate the performance possibilities of electric propulsion.

Add five motors and a 56.8 kilowatt-hour nickel-manganese-cobalt ultra-high-performance battery to a Mustang Mach-E GT body-in white and this is what you get:

  • 1,400 peak horsepower,
  • 2,300 pounds of downforce at 150 mph,
  • A game changer for an upcoming NASCAR race.

“Now is the perfect time to leverage electric technology, learn from it, and apply it to our lineup,” said Ron Heiser, chief program engineer, Mustang Mach-E. “Mustang Mach-E is going to be fun to drive, just like every other Mustang before it, but Mustang Mach-E 1400 is completely insane, thanks to the efforts of Ford Performance and RTR.”

Out of the racing tool chest

Using many of the same tools Ford uses for its race cars and production programs, aerodynamics are optimized for shape and location with a focus on cooling ducts, front splitter, dive planes and rear wing.

The additional motors are split between the front and rear drive axles, with the added benefit of being adjustable to different types of performance from drifting to high-speed track racing. Power delivery can be split evenly between front and rear, or completely to one or the other.