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The Rolls-Royce Phantom was the car that re-launched its brand in inimitable style and in the updated Series II version of this eighth generation design, it's still a super-luxury saloon that still commands the road like no other car on Earth. Massive in every respect and full of cutting-edge technology, it combines British craftsmanship with BMW engineering know-how.
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Driving experience
What should a Rolls-Royce be like behind the wheel? Supremely silent and comfortable is the obvious answer, so that's where the brand's engineers have devoted most of their attention in creating this MK8 model. The car now includes over 130kgs of sound-deadening material - it's even found in the tyres. Power, as before, comes from a 6.75-litre V12 engine - though Rolls-Royce says that this one's all-new, featuring twin turbochargers and delivering the same power output - 563bhp - as the brand's smaller Ghost saloon. But I digress. What's really relevant of course is how this car feels to ride in. And you probably don't need me to tell you that it feels exquisite, the last word in comfort, refinement and luxury. You waft silently over even the most seriously potholed surfaces as though they weren't there. A whisper valve in the exhaust system means that at wafting speeds, the car is virtually silent. With air springs and aluminium multi-link suspension, ride comfort is also superb. You wouldn't expect anything less, would you?
The extra body stiffness of the all-new platform should make quite a difference through the turns - that's if you've given your chauffeur the day off. Surprisingly, Rolls-Royce hasn't incorporated the BMW Group's latest autonomous driving tech: apparently, owners don't really want it. Most of them already have someone to take over the helm if necessary, after all.
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Design and build
The changes made to the Series II Phantom MK8 are subtle: slightly re-shaped headlights and a marginally re-angled grille. Plus some fresh alloy wheel designs. That's about it. As before, nobody could accuse this Rolls Royce of looking ordinary and, if you like to keep a low profile, then you'd be better off plumping for something more discreet like a Mercedes-Maybach. The Phantom still makes quite a statement - as a Rolls Royce should.
The main thing you need to know about this eighth generation Phantom is that it doesn't sit on some kind of shared platform originally designed for a much humbler luxury car. Rolls thinks that customers want - and deserve - something more bespoke, hence an aluminium spaceframe that's between 30 and 100% stiffer than the previous pre-2017-generation model's platform - depending on where you look.
The inside is of course sumpteous. There's a choice of standard or extended wheelbase body shapes, but either way, the amount of room you get in the rear is vast. The two sculpted back chairs move, heat and cool you. Up front, you sit quite high up - about 15 to 20cms higher than you would in an ordinary executive saloon. And, compared to the old MK7 Phantom, this generation design offers a slightly different view out frontwards down the flatter bonnet to where the Spirit of Ecstasy mascot sits proudly at the end.
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Market and model
The official new price is about £380,000, but in reality you'll need a £400,000 budget for this Phantom - and that's just a starting point. Think in erms of a premium of around £50,000 if you want the EWB extended wheelbase version. Still, total figures of this sort are merely a drop in the ocean for the typical Rolls Royce customer. An estimated 1,000 cars roll out of Rolls Royce's £65m Goodwood plant each year, which at an average of quarter of a million pounds apiece bring in £250m. The factory itself is an astonishing facility, designed by Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, architect of the Eden Project in Cornwall. The floor has been sunk 5 feet below ground level and the roof has been landscaped over with grass, leading some commentators to envision a sort of subterranean Blofeld's lair. Indeed, there is something a little sinister about the silence, the immaculate employees identically dressed in pleated corduroy and tweeds and the German vowel sounds occasionally ringing down the line. There's no paint shop: instead there's a 'Surface Technology Centre'.
Whether you go for a standard or extended wheelbase Phantom saloon, it will come appropriately specified for your needs. I haven't time to cover everything here but highlights include the front and rear parking sensors you'll certainly need in tight spaces, power-closing doors both front and rear, a power-closing boot lid, a sunroof, multi-zone climate control, heated front and rear seats with driver memory functions, a leather headliner with wool and cashmere accent panels, and veneered picnic tables built into the rear seatbacks. There are even brollies (Teflon-coated, naturally to stop them rotting if you put them away wet) housed inside the rear doors. For this Series II model, the brand now offers an app, 'Rolls-Royce Connected', which of course allows you to remotely interact with your car and book a service, but also allows you to do things like remotely plot a forthcoming navigation route; or even book a restaurant table.
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Cost of ownership
As the saying goes, if you have to ask, then you really can't afford it. Combined cycle fuel consumption will struggle to get above 20mpg (the official figure is up to 18.2mpg on the combined cycle). So with top-of-the-shop group 50 insurance and CO2 emissions of up to 351g/km for the standard version, the Phantom is definitely a guilty pleasure. Couple those statistics with depreciation that equates to around 50% over three years and you have yourself a seriously expensive motor car. That won't be an issue for potential Phantom owners but then there's the problem of fitting it into your garage. So you might have to think about some house alterations, too...
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Summary
So, is this a glorious irrelevance or the world's finest motorcar? Or maybe, just maybe, a bit of both. It's certainly hard to think of another means of transport that offers luxury, elegance and style on this level. In one of these, a journey isn't something you undertake merely to get somewhere you'd rather be: getting there becomes part of the pleasure.
The way the designers of this car have tapped into such a deep vein of tradition and history is as impressive as the care taken in its construction. It takes at least 460 hours to hand-build one of these before the five layers of paint and clear lacquer are hand-polished for five hours. The result is a cut above the rest - a car that Charles Rolls and Henry Royce would be proud of.
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