7 Classic cars crying out for an EV conversion

Battery-electric swaps go against the grain for some vintage cars—but for these ones, electrons could make things better

Converting classic vehicles to electric power is a topic that carries as much controversy as, say, a German theologian nailing his 95 theses to a church door. Heresy! Take away that combustion engine and you’re taking away a beloved icon’s beating heart, leaving an appliance behind that has no more soul than a toaster.

This got us thinking: what other classic machines could benefit from an EV swap? We mean ones that not even the purists could complain about — machines that are just crying out to be improved with a battery pack and electric drive. Here are seven picks for EV conversions that have the potential to be not only un-heretical, but positively divine.

Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud II

“At 60 miles an hour, the loudest noise in this new Rolls-Royce comes from the electric clock.” This famous tagline, penned in the 1950s by ad-man David Ogilvy, is as good as they come. It’s also basically a lie, as a 1950s Rolls looks graceful, but is only genteel when compared to its rough-and-tumble contemporaries.

Rolls-Royce conversion by Lunaz
1960 Rolls-Royce Silver Cloud II EV conversion by LunazPhoto by Lunaz

Citroën DS

The DS is French elegance personified, a car of such peerless grace that saying its name aloud – déesse – is to invoke the French word for “goddess.” Unfortunately, under its curving sheetmetal is a series of four-cylinder engines that are as boring as onion soup.

Volkswagen Karmann Ghia

Volkswagen Karmann Ghia convertible
Volkswagen Karmann Ghia convertiblePhoto by Volkswagen

The Karmann Ghia is beautiful. It is stylish. It is handmade and sporty-looking. It’s also slower than a contemporary Volkswagen Beetle, upon whose platform it rides.

Who wouldn’t say, “Hello, there,” to a classic Karmann Ghia that finally has the straight-line performance to match its slippery looks? And, as the Ghia is common (not quite as common as the Beetle, but still) there’d be plenty of sluggardly air-cooled ones for those who are into that sort of thing.

Aston Martin Lagonda

Aston Martin Lagonda
Aston Martin LagondaPhoto by Aston Martin

Nightmarishly unreliable if you don’t know what you’re doing, the futuristic-looking Lagonda saloon did come with a proper V8 under its angular hood. But that doesn’t mean it was powered by eight cylinders — rather that it was occasionally powered by seven, or three, or none at all.

Cadillac DeVille

Yes, that Cadillac. The Boss Hogg one, triple-white with longhorns up front and party in back. How great would cruising around town in this kind of land-barge be? The only thing that could make it better is not having a massive, emissions-choked V8 swilling down the gasoline and while delivering as much horsepower as a hand blender.

1970 Cadillac DeVille convertible, auctioned by Greensboro Auto Auction
1970 Cadillac DeVille convertible, auctioned by Greensboro Auto AuctionPhoto by Greensboro Auto Auction

Any Cadillac from the 1970s would do here, an Eldorado or a Fleetwood Brougham. Or we can also throw the door open to chief rival Lincoln, and invite one of its football-field-sized personal luxury coupes to join the EV party.

Volkswagen Westfalia

Part of the drawback of converting a classic to EV is how much the conversion costs, which is why people only do it for more valuable cars. Good news, then, if you’ve seen how much a Subaru-powered restomod 1980s VW Westfalia goes for.

Andrew McCredie's 1974 Volkswagen Westfalia camper, circa 1990
Andrew McCredie’s 1974 Volkswagen Westfalia camper, circa 1990Photo by Andrew McCredie

Granted, electric conversion of a Westy might come with less roaming range than the gasoline-powered versions. However, having all that reliable onboard juice would make for a much better camping experience, with an actually functioning fridge, cooking surface, and proper LED lighting at night.

It’d be a return to pop-top mini-RV bliss, and if you end up spending a little time at fast-chargers on your road trip, well, you’re in a home-on-wheels anyway.

DeLorean DMC-12

Electrogenic's DeLorean DMC-12 EV conversion
Electrogenic’s DeLorean DMC-12 EV conversionPhoto by Electrogenic

Doc and Marty would love it, and there are of course already people doing this conversion. No-one gets mad about ditching the original V6, not even online. Because it might seem wrong to lose something like the flat-six soundtrack from a Porsche 911, but cars like the DMC-12 deserve the EV conversions that’ll keep them from running outta time.

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