Grecale Folgore – AutoApp Dev https://www.autoapp.sg/dev Sat, 31 May 2025 18:04:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Maserati Grecale Folgore Review https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=282390 Sat, 31 May 2025 18:04:37 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=282390 With a name like “Grecale Folgore”, you’d be forgiven for thinking it’s the villain in a mid-season episode of The Sopranos.


But this isn’t a wise guy from Jersey, but rather Maserati’s first all-electric SUV. ‘Grecale’ refers to a north-eastern Mediterranean wind, and ‘Folgore’? That’s lightning. Fitting, considering this near-2.5-tonne Italian stallion can rocket to 100km/h in just 4.1 seconds.

But don’t let the poetry of the name fool you. The Grecale Folgore is a serious proposition for Maserati, the start of a high-voltage handshake to the future.

Familiar Face, Very Different Heart

Maserati Grecale Folgore

At first glance, the Folgore doesn’t scream “EV”, and that’s entirely intentional. Instead of blank grilles and novelty lighting signatures, the Folgore retains the regal elegance of its ICE siblings, albeit with the faintest flicker of copper trim to mark its electric bloodline.

Maserati Grecale Folgore

Look closely and you’ll spot subtle tweaks: filled-in front wing vents now glow with LEDs, and the front grille features fewer air openings.

It’s 4.8 metres long, stands 1.6m tall, and has a near-three-metre wheelbase, which translates to a cabin roomy enough for your average basketball forward. Boot space stands at 535 litres.

Maserati Grecale Folgore cabin

Up on the flight deck, you still get a Maserati clock – now digital, with changeable faces for g-force, direction, throttle pressure and more. It’s flanked by twin touchscreens (12.3in above, 8.8in below) and a crisp digital instrument cluster.

Maserati Grecale Folgore infotainment screen

Infotainment, though, is a mixed bag. The upper touchscreen is sharp and intuitive. The lower climate screen, however, feels like overkill with the array of functions available, and occasionally lagged during our drive.

The driving position sits at a sweet spot between commanding SUV and low-slung GT. The steering wheel is satisfyingly chunky, with cruise and infotainment controls at your thumbs, and a drive selector on the lower spoke. Physical door handles are out; in their place is a soft-touch button system.

Maserati Grecale Folgore boot

Cabin materials are typically premium; leather comes standard, but for the eco-minded, there’s also Econyl, a material spun from recycled fishing nets.

Electric, Not Generic

Push the blue-lit starter button and instead of a barky V6, you’re greeted with a deep, digital hum. It’s not the soul-stirring song of a Ferrari-derived V8, but it sets the tone.

With 550bhp and 820Nm from twin motors, performance is brisk, not ludicrous. Maserati clearly tuned the Grecale for smoothness over savagery. It’s quick enough to surprise unsuspecting hot hatches, but it delivers that speed with a waft, not a wallop.

Maserati Grecale Folgore

Built on a heavily reworked version of the Giorgio platform, the Grecale Folgore benefits from adaptive air suspension, multi-link rear geometry and electromagnetic damping. In GT mode, it feels composed, absorbing bumps, ironing out undulations, and masking its bulk with real grace… if you are travelling at modest speeds.

The soft suspension makes the car squat hard when presented with too much power, resulting in the front wheels lifting off and being unable to provide traction. 

This effect is lessened in Sport mode, but the car still feels too soft considering the amount of power it can churn out.

Maserati Grecale Folgore

Off-Road mode lifts the car and softens the springs for trail use, or more realistically, navigating multi-storey car park ramps without scraping the splitter. Max Range mode, predictably, dials everything back to preserve electrons.

Steering is progressive and nicely weighted. The braking system is functional but lacks finesse, with regen blending into mechanical stopping in a slightly clumsy fashion. Over-sized regen paddles let you adjust on the fly, and yes, one-pedal driving is available. Relying on a comfortable regen setting and coasting to a stop would provide the best ride for your occupants.

Compared to the ICE Grecale?

Maserati Grecale Folgore

If you swapped the Folgore badge for a Trofeo one and turned up the synthetic engine noise, you’d struggle to tell the difference. And that’s the point. Maserati wants this to feel like a Maserati, not an electric experiment. Laminated glass, extra bushings, and extensive sound insulation help it whisper along, even at motorway speeds. It’s quiet, polished, and despite its size, feels nimble enough in daily use.

The 105kWh battery is good for 501 kilometres according to Maserati, but we’d bank on around 390-400 kilometres in real-world conditions. The battery does support up to 205kW DC charging too, which futureproofs the car for the foreseeable future.

A Whisper Of The Old World

Maserati Grecale Folgore

The Maserati Grecale Folgore isn’t the quickest, lightest, or most tech-forward electric SUV. It’s not chasing headlines or TikTok drag races. Instead, it’s targeting a more discerning audience, those who want elegance over excess.

Sure, the Porsche Macan EV will likely outrun it. The BMW iX will dazzle with tech. The Lotus Eletre might just dance around it in the bends. But the Maserati? It delivers a different, soulful kind of drama.

Maserati has resisted the urge to scream its electric credentials from the rooftops, instead choosing to craft an EV that feels and drives like it belongs. And in a world of cookie-cutter electric SUVs, that counts for more than ever.

Technical Specifications

Maserati Grecale Folgore

Powertrain: Dual Electric Motors, All-Wheel Drive
Power: 410 kW (550 bhp)
Torque: 820 Nm
Gearbox: Single-Speed (A)
Acceleration: 4.1 Seconds (0-100km/h)
Top Speed: 220 km/h
Battery Capacity: 105 kWh
Drive Range: 501 km
Energy Consumption: 3.6 km/kWh (claimed)
Price: S$438,800 without COE (accurate at the time of this article)

Photo Credits: Sean Loo (@auto.driven)


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Maserati Launches Folgore Range In Singapore https://www.autoapp.sg/dev/?p=281592 Sat, 05 Apr 2025 17:28:57 +0000 https://www.autoapp.sg/?p=281592 They say lightning never strikes the same place twice, but the Italian Trident just launched three new electrified Maserati Folgore models. 


And just like that, Modena’s fabled trident carved out a new chapter in Singapore’s electrified motoring scene.

Meet the Maserati Folgore trio: Grecale, GranTurismo, and GranCabrio. Three distinctive models, one common current. In case your Italian’s a little rusty, Folgore translates to ‘lightning’.

A rather fitting label for Maserati’s new line of fully electric machines, infused with the brand’s signature flair for drama, speed, and unfiltered charisma.

Grecale Folgore

Maserati Grecale Folgore

We begin with the most grounded member of this electrified ensemble, the Grecale Folgore. Already known as Maserati’s first compact SUV, the Grecale now returns with a new heartbeat, powered by not one but two electric motors delivering a brawny 550bhp and 820Nm of torque to all four wheels.

A century sprint time of just 4.1 seconds, despite the SUV’s not-so-dainty kerb weight of 2.5 tonnes.

Thanks to a hefty 105kWh battery, the car has a range of 500km (WLTP). DC fast-charging at 150kW ensures that topping up from 20 to 80% takes only 29 minutes.

Maserati Grecale Folgore

Visually, Maserati has been generous with the details. The Folgore-exclusive grille, gloss-black inserts, and copper accents on the badging and brake calipers tell the world that this is no ordinary Grecale.

Inside, embossed patterns grace the dash, and you’re greeted by a 12.3-inch touchscreen, an additional 8.8-inch Comfort Display, and the same premium layout familiar to petrol-powered Grecales.

Practicality hasn’t been sacrificed at the altar of performance either, with the 535-litre boot remaining intact.

GranTurismo & GranCabrio Folgore

Maserati Grancabrio Folgore

Now, if the Grecale Folgore is a storm on wheels, then the GranTurismo Folgore and GranCabrio Folgore are pure, unadulterated lightning strikes.

Here, Maserati has gone all in; both cars are armed with a tri-motor setup (one in front, two in the rear), allowing for torque vectoring that can independently feed power to each rear wheel.

This means sharper handling, tighter cornering, and a level of dynamism not often associated with grand tourers.

Maserati Granturismo Folgore

Together, the trio of motors churn out 751bhp and 1,350Nm of torque, propelling the GranTurismo Folgore from zero to 100km/h in 2.7 seconds.

The GranCabrio follows closely behind at 2.8 seconds, its slight weight penalty offset by the joy of open-air motoring.

The 92.5kWh battery offers up to 455km of range in the GranTurismo and 447km in the GranCabrio. Thanks to their 800V architecture, both models can be juiced from 20 to 80% in 18 minutes using a 270kW DC charger.

And of course, they’re achingly pretty. The signature Maserati grille is finished in dark copper, matching the rest of the badging.

Inside, copper accents continue the theme, complemented by a triple-screen digital dashboard similar to that of the Grecale.

As the world’s first fully electric luxury convertible, the Grancabrio opens up its fabric roof in 14 seconds, even while moving at speeds of up to 50km/h.

A new dawn for the Trident

Each Maserati Folgore model is designed to preserve the brand’s storied DNA while writing a new future. One that’s quieter, cleaner, but no less exhilarating.

To some, the idea of an electric Maserati may sound like sacrilege. But to those who’ve seen lightning strike thrice, it feels like an interesting new direction.


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