At the beginning of 2025 Renault set its engineers a task: create an electric vehicle (EV) that could do 1000km without needing to be recharged while driving at realistic highway speeds of over 100km/h, which well above the typical speeds used in hypermiling.

The Filante Record 2025 concept managed this feat on December 18 on the UTAC test track about two hours south-east of Casablanca in Morocco, when it was driven 1008km in a smidge under 10 hours.

Its average driving speed was over 110km/h as the running time included technical stops and two driver changes. The vehicle was piloted by Constance Léraud-Reyser, a chassis engineer at Alpine; Laurent Hurgon, test driver for Alpine; and Arthur Ferriere, a chassis tuning engineer at Alpine.

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To achieve its goal, Renault could’ve just whipped up a car with a ginormous battery pack and called it day, but the company limited itself to using a battery pack with the same capacity (87kWh) as the long range versions of the Scenic E-Tech.

The 87kWh variant of the Scenic E-Tech has a 160kW/300Nm motor driving the front wheels, and a WLTP range of 625km. That’s well short of the 1000km target, so the company had to optimise its record-attempt vehicle for weight and aerodynamic efficiency.

Renault says the design of the Filante Record 2025’s body is a homage to 40CV, a luxury sedan from 1925, and the Étoile Filante, a gas turbine-powered car from 1954 developed to set a world land speed record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah.