{"id":3698,"date":"2025-08-22T15:15:00","date_gmt":"2025-08-22T15:15:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/opendoorcounselingpa.com\/?p=3698"},"modified":"2025-08-26T14:33:40","modified_gmt":"2025-08-26T14:33:40","slug":"rolls-royce-just-threw-a-phantom-into-a-pool-for-real","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/opendoorcounselingpa.com\/index.php\/2025\/08\/22\/rolls-royce-just-threw-a-phantom-into-a-pool-for-real\/","title":{"rendered":"Rolls-Royce Just Threw A Phantom Into A Pool. For Real"},"content":{"rendered":"
Rolls-Royce has never been shy about making a statement, but this time the brand took things to another level. In a stunt designed to honor the Phantom’s long-standing connection to music culture<\/a>, the company lowered a prototype into a swimming pool.<\/p>\n \t\t\t\tvar adpushup = window.adpushup = window.adpushup || {que:[]}; While modern AI tools can create such a surreal image in seconds, this was no digital trick, with Rolls-Royce even releasing a behind-the-scenes video to prove it really happened.<\/p>\n More: The BMW Group Brand With The Youngest Buyers Might Surprise You<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n Before anyone mourns the loss of a stately machine, it’s worth noting this was a retired Phantom<\/a> prototype destined for recycling. Not just any version either, but the extended wheelbase model, stretching an impressive 5,982 mm (235.5 inches). It took up nearly as much space as the pool itself.<\/p>\n Instead of tipping it over the edge, Rolls-Royce<\/a> opted for a more careful approach. A crane placed the car on a submerged platform so the water level rose only just above the wheel centers, close to the Phantom’s real-world wading depth. In theory, even a production car might have survived such a dip, though the company wisely chose a prototype instead.<\/p>\n Rock-and-roll inspiration<\/strong><\/p>\n But how does this stunt relate to the music industry? According to music lore, Keith Moon, the famously unpredictable drummer of The Who, once drove a Phantom into a pool on his 21st birthday in the 1970s. Moon later claimed the car was actually a Lincoln<\/a> Continental, while guests admitted they couldn’t remember much at all. Fact or fiction, the legend inspired Rolls-Royce to revisit the tale as part of the Phantom’s centenary celebrations this year.<\/p>\n
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