Driving the Porsche Macan Turbo Electric Along Saxony’s Silberstraße

There are roads that exist to get you somewhere, and roads that make you forget where you’re going. Saxony’s Silberstraße—the historic Silver Route threading through Germany’s Ore Mountains—belongs firmly in the second category. In winter light, with frost still clinging to the forest floor, the tarmac takes on a muted gleam, as if polished by centuries of use. It’s not actually silver, of course. But reflected in the Ice Grey Metallic paint of the Porsche Macan Turbo Electric, it’s close enough to feel intentional.

We’re in the Erzgebirge, a modest mountain range by European standards, straddling the German–Czech border. No towering peaks here, no Alpine drama. Instead, the appeal is quieter: dense spruce forests, medieval towns tucked into valleys, and a sense of history that doesn’t need signposts. More than 800 years ago, silver was discovered here, transforming the region into Europe’s most important mining center by the 16th century. Cities rose, wealth flowed, and Saxony’s cultural DNA was permanently altered. The Silberstraße—now a 140-kilometer scenic route—is the physical trace of that legacy.

The Macan moves through it all with near-total silence. On these narrow, undulating roads, that quiet feels almost reverent. You pass old mine entrances converted into museums and imagine the clang of picks and the creak of ore carts—sounds now replaced by the faint whir of electric motors and the soft crunch of winter grit under Michelin rubber. It’s progress without spectacle, which feels appropriate here.

Starting in Zwickau, an industrial town whose brick factories hint at a manufacturing past, the route quickly dives into forest. Sunlight cuts through bare branches in sharp blades, flashing across the Macan’s flanks. The Turbo Electric’s power delivery is immediate but never abrupt, a reminder that performance doesn’t need noise to announce itself. It just needs grip, balance, and a well-calibrated right pedal.

Schwarzenberg rises out of the trees like a postcard—castle on a hill, steep streets curling below. But this isn’t just a medieval detour. It’s also home to Porsche Werkzeugbau, the brand’s in-house toolmaking operation. For over a century, precision tools have been produced here, including forming equipment for Ferdinand Porsche’s original Volkswagen Beetle. Today, this facility quietly shapes the future of Porsche manufacturing, designing the dies and tools that give modern cars their exacting tolerances. It’s an easy detail to miss, but one that ties the region’s craft tradition directly to Porsche’s obsession with precision.

From there, a short detour takes us to Seiffen, the so-called Toy Village. If there’s an unofficial capital of Christmas, this is it. Wooden nutcrackers stand guard in shop windows, nativity scenes glow under warm lights, and hand-carved figurines crowd every shelf. The town’s woodcraft tradition exists because mining eventually didn’t—when silver ran out, miners turned to timber, transforming survival skills into artistry.

Inside Erzgebirgische Volkskunst Richard Glässer, the air smells of fresh-cut wood. Lathes hum, artisans assemble tiny figures by hand, and centuries-old techniques feel very much alive. Traditional Christmas pyramids—tiered wooden carousels once powered by candle heat—now spin via small electric motors. Outside, the Macan waits, its battery charged, its torque instant. Old craftsmanship, new propulsion. Same idea, different century.

The Silberstraße eventually leads to Freiberg and onward to Dresden, where Baroque architecture—funded by the silver once hauled along this route—frames one of the world’s oldest Christmas markets. The Striezelmarkt is a sensory overload of lights, music, and the unmistakable smell of glühwein and roasted chestnuts. In the center stands a massive wooden pyramid, slowly rotating above the crowd. If there’s a better visual metaphor for tradition in motion, it’s hard to think of one.

The next morning, we point the Macan north toward Leipzig, home to Porsche’s factory and Experience Center. The building’s sharp, geometric architecture feels almost extraterrestrial after days of timber towns and cobblestones. Delivering a hand-carved Christmas gift here feels symbolic—Saxony’s oldest craft meeting its newest expressions of mobility.

Long-distance EV travel, once a planning exercise, fades into the background thanks to Porsche Charging Lounges along the route. At Himmelkron and Estenfeld, 400-kW chargers, clean lounges, and fast turnaround times make recharging feel like a coffee stop, not a compromise. With the Macan capable of jumping from 10 to 80 percent in about 21 minutes, it’s barely enough time to finish an espresso.

As dusk settles over the Erzgebirge, it becomes clear that the Silberstraße isn’t just a themed drive. It’s a living timeline—mining to manufacturing, candles to kilowatts, tradition to technology. In winter, wrapped in lights and history, it feels like driving straight into the cultural heart of Christmas. And doing it in near silence somehow makes it better.

Source: Porsche

Why the Ram 1500 Is Leaning Into Affordability Again

Sticker shock has officially gone mainstream. With the average transaction price of a new vehicle ballooning to $49,814 in November, even traditionally loyal truck buyers are blinking twice before signing on the dotted line. Ford recently summed it up best: “price fatigue” is real. And in 2025, that fatigue is reshaping what Americans want parked in their driveways.

Ram appears to be paying attention.

Tim Kuniskis, Ram’s CEO, has made it clear that the real battleground isn’t at the luxury end of the truck market—it’s below $50,000. That’s where volume lives, and that’s where buyers are rediscovering the appeal of simpler, entry-level trims that don’t feel like punishment.

On paper, the 2026 Ram 1500 already makes a compelling case. Starting at $41,575, it undercuts many rivals while still delivering the size, power, and refinement expected from a modern full-size pickup. But competition in the budget-friendly truck space is brutal, and Ram isn’t exactly winning the price war outright. Ford and General Motors still own the sub-$50K conversation, with GM in particular dominating the segment. For Stellantis’ truck brand, that gap represents opportunity—and urgency.

Enter the Ram 1500 Express.

Introduced earlier this year, the Express starts at $43,700 and smartly avoids the bargain-bin aesthetic that often plagues cheaper trims. Body-color bumpers, 20-inch wheels, and a gloss-black grille surround give it curb appeal, while the cabin benefits from upgraded interior accents that feel deliberate rather than deleted. Even better, Ram didn’t strip away the tech: adaptive cruise control and automatic emergency braking are standard, proving that affordability no longer has to mean analog living.

For buyers with dirtier intentions, Ram already laid some groundwork with last year’s 1500 Warlock. Starting at $52,415, it’s not exactly cheap, but it is purpose-built. Think rugged suspension, Bilstein dampers, and a one-inch lift, backed up by skid plates, an electronic locking rear differential, and powder-coated bumpers that beg to be scraped. Four-wheel drive, tow hooks, and all-terrain tires complete the look—and the mission.

Still, the Express and Warlock feel like opening moves rather than endgame strategies.

Ram has publicly committed to more than 25 product announcements over an 18-month stretch, and while several have already landed, plenty remain under wraps. Among them is a high-performance variant set to debut on New Year’s Day, a reminder that Ram hasn’t abandoned speed and spectacle even as it courts more cost-conscious buyers.

The takeaway? Ram knows where the market is headed. As prices climb and patience wears thin, the brand is rediscovering the value of value. If more affordable Ram 1500 trims are indeed on the way, don’t be surprised—just relieved.

This Rolls-Royce Dawn Widebody Looks Like a Concept Car That Escaped the Design Studio

There’s luxury, there’s excess, and then there’s whatever is happening in Dubai. Venuum, a tuning house that appears to view understatement as a personal insult, has returned with another ultra-luxury remix—this time turning its attention to the Rolls-Royce Dawn. If the brand name doesn’t ring a bell, that’s fine. The visuals will make sure you remember it.

Earlier this year, Venuum revealed a widebody kit for the Rolls-Royce Wraith that looked less like a coachbuilt grand tourer and more like a rejected render from an early-2010s street-racing video game. Now the company has applied a similar philosophy—if we can call it that—to the Wraith’s convertible sibling. And yes, Venuum is confirming U.S. availability, because apparently someone here asked for this.

At a glance, the Dawn has been transformed into something that could plausibly be described as a Rolls-Royce ordered at 2 a.m. after too much caffeine and not enough impulse control. That said, taste is subjective, and if subtlety has never been your thing, Venuum’s widebody Dawn may speak directly to your soul.

The most shocking change is right up front, where Rolls-Royce’s iconic chrome grille has been replaced with a white slab punctured by a repeating pattern of triangular holes. It’s a bold move, considering the grille is basically half the reason a Rolls-Royce looks like a Rolls-Royce in the first place. The same geometric motif appears in the lower intakes, ensuring that your eyes never fully relax.

The front bumper doesn’t stop there. Rounded auxiliary lights protrude awkwardly from the fascia, while the original headlights are partially obscured by the new bodywork. Even the Spirit of Ecstasy hasn’t been spared. The famous hood ornament is now finished in white, paired with an orange Rolls-Royce badge that feels less “British aristocracy” and more “luxury sneaker collab.”

Along the sides, Venuum leans hard into the widebody look with new front and rear quarter panels and dramatically swollen rocker panels. The Dawn already isn’t a small car, but this kit makes it look like it’s been inflated with a bicycle pump. Subtlety, again, is not invited to this party.

Completing the profile is a set of solid-face wheels developed with U.S.-based Creative Bespoke. Finished in brushed metal, they evoke old-school aerodynamic disc wheels, though the effect here is more art installation than endurance racer. Whether they look retro-cool or deeply confusing will depend entirely on your personal tolerance for visual noise.

If you somehow made peace with the front and sides, the rear will undo that progress. Venuum has completely ditched the Dawn’s original rear fascia, replacing it with ultra-slim taillights, a full-width LED light bar, and a heavily reshaped bumper with an aggressive diffuser. Aftermarket exhaust tips finish the look, just in case anyone doubted that this Rolls-Royce has been thoroughly modified. The entire car is coated in matte white—paint or wrap, Venuum isn’t saying—which only amplifies the kit’s concept-car energy.

Inside, things somehow get louder. The cabin is trimmed in a high-contrast mix of white and orange leather, a color combination that mirrors the exterior’s refusal to blend in. It’s unclear whether this interior treatment is part of Venuum’s package or a factory option chosen by a particularly confident buyer, but either way, it completes the look.

Venuum plans to build just 25 examples of the widebody Dawn, which means your odds of encountering one in the wild are mercifully low. Still, it’s hard not to admire the commitment. In a world where most luxury modifications play it safe, this Dawn swings wildly in the opposite direction.

Is it tasteful? That’s not really the point. This is a Rolls-Royce Dawn for people who think restraint is overrated and attention is a feature, not a side effect. And for that very specific audience, Venuum has delivered exactly what they were looking for—whether the rest of us were ready for it or not.

Source: Venuum via Instagram

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