This is the all-new Wraith, Rolls Royce's luxurious interpretation of a  performance coupe. Revealed just hours before it makes its first  appearance in front of a crowd at the Geneva Motor Show on March 5, the  Wraith is dubbed as the most powerful and fastest production car ever  built by Rolls Royce.
What Rolls Royce considers performance and what the rest of the world  considers performance, are two very different things, as proved by the  Wraith's heavy underpinnings sourced from the Ghost limo and the fact  that the British company highlights (pun intended) the car's Starlight  Headliner featuring 1,340 fibre optic lamps that "give the impression of  a glittering, starry night sky"…
Even so, the Wraith is no slouch, with its tuned 6.6-liter twin-turbo'd  V12 engine delivering 624hp (633PS) and a peak torque of 800Nm (590  lb-ft) for a 0-60mph sprint in 4.4 seconds (0-100km/h in 4.2 seconds),  compared with 563hp and 0-60mph in 4.7 seconds for the Ghost sedan.  Rolls-Royce did not disclose the Wraith's top speed. The V12 engine is  paired to an 8-speed automatic transmission from ZF driving the rear  wheels.
Rolls Royce says it has re-tuned the suspension to "minimize body roll  and discreetly amplify feedback when cornering; while steering weight is  heavier at high speeds and lighter at low speeds adding to the spirited  drive".
The fastback-style coupe is 5,269 mm / 17 ft.3 long, 1,947 mm / 6 ft 5  wide and 1,507 mm / 4 ft 11, while it rides on a 3,112 mm / 10 ft 2  wheelbase, making it 130mm (5.1 inches) shorter in overall length than  the Ghost sedan. The Wraith has a curb weight of 2,360 kg / 5,203  pounds.
Inside, you will find a familiar dashboard from the Ghost, the  aforementioned "Starlight Headliner" and more wood veneer than a  Victorian house.
A new tech feature that makes its debut in the Wraith is the Satellite  Aided Transmission (SAT) that relies on GPS data and driving style to  select the most appropriate gear for the terrain ahead.
Rolls-Royce said sales of the four-seater model will begin in the final  quarter of 2013, with European pricing to start from around €245,000  (US$320,000) – evidently, pricing will differ from country to country.






