The SSC Tuatara Claims "Fastest Car in the World" Title (Again)
The fastest production car is American—Sweden's Koenigsegg was the previous record-holder.Update January 27, 2021:After a much-publicized and highly scrutinized initial top-speed record run in October of last year—you can read about that run below, and the controversy here—SSC has announced a new top-speed record for production cars at 282.9 mph with its Tuatara hypercar. It was the third attempt for the company after the initial run and a December effort thwarted by mechanical issues; professional racer Oliver Webb was the driver in October, while the car's owner, Larry Caplin, took the wheel for tries two and three.
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The Tuatara hit a two-way average speed of 282.9 mph using 2.3 miles of a three-mile runway at Kennedy Space Center, with the data being captured using Racelogic VBOX equipment, as well as hardware and/or software from Life Racing and Garmin. The International Mile Racing Association is also touted as validating the speed. The first, northbound run registered 279.7 mph, while during the second, the Tuatara hit 286.1 mph in 1.9 miles before Caplin began to decelerate. The runs were made 50 minutes apart. SSC still plans to attempt to break the 300-mph mark, extending its own record and becoming the first production vehicle to reach or exceed that speed. Video of the latest runs can be viewed below:
Original story:
Nobody needs to go 280 or 300 mph. Hardly anybody has the space available (or the fortitude required) to drive those speeds. But everybody wants to know which car is fastest. The followers of such achievements will tell you that in 2017 the 277.9-mph Koenigsegg Agera RS snatched that record from 2010's 267.9-mph Bugatti Veyron 16.4 Super Sport. Well, on Saturday, October 10, a team gathered alongside a closed, seven-mile section of Highway 160 near Pahrump, Nevada to attempt—and set—a new record, with U.K. pro racer Oliver Webb driving a supercar hailing from Richland, Washington, theSSC Tuatara. The new speed? A staggering315.7 mph!
Best Two Runs in Opposite Directions
The SSC team spent a week acclimating Webb to the car, starting out on a 3,800-foot runway achieving speeds of up to 204 and 205 mph; then decamped three hours away to a longer, 7,000-foot runway, where Webb managed to hit 270 mph, at which point the whole team felt comfortable attempting the run. SSC North America founder Jarod Shelby (no relation to Carroll), who has done nearly all of the test driving prior to bringing Webb on for the record, rode shotgun for some of these runs and was humbled by Webb's F1-driver comfort level regarding proximity to the end of the runway before initiating braking. "I'm thinking, 'when in the world is he going to get on the brakes?' He brakedwaylater than I would have."
Then on the morning of the big run, following a few modest 100-mph passes to warm the drivetrain, with crosswinds just slightly under the 10-mph limit the team had set for itself, the team instrumented the car and sent Webb off for his first run.



