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Many elements change how fast the car can accelerate to 60 mph. [ii] [iii] Tires, elevation above sea level, weight of the driver, testing equipment, weather conditions and surface of testing track all influence these times. [3]
Manufacturer Marque Model State Facility Percentage of model's contents made in the U.S. or Canada (2024) [1] BMW Group [2]: BMW: X3: South Carolina: BMW US Manufacturing Company
The car made its debut at the 2020 Philadelphia Auto Show. The vehicle is limited to 100 examples. [19] On October 10, 2020, driver Oliver Webb allegedly broke the production car speed record in the SSC Tuatara with a top speed of 331.15 miles per hour and a 2-way average of 316.11 mph on a closed public roadway with street tires and non-race ...
On January 21, 2013, the Venom GT set a Guinness World Record for the fastest road legal car from 0–186 mph (0–300 km/h) with an average acceleration time of 13.63 seconds. [2] In addition, the car set an unofficial record for 0–200 mph (0–322 km/h) acceleration at 14.51 seconds, beating the Koenigsegg Agera R 's time of 17.68 seconds ...
Spirit of America was the first of the modern record breaking jet-propelled cars, [citation needed] built with a narrow streamlined fuselage, three-wheel chassis, and, most significantly, turbojet engine. Like most of the other competing vehicles, the engine was ex-military.
Automotive superlatives include attributes such as the smallest, largest, fastest, lightest, best-selling, and so on. This list (except for the firsts section) is limited to automobiles built after World War II, and lists superlatives for earlier vehicles separately. The list is also limited to production road cars that:
Plenty of “foreign” automobiles are made in America. ... The massive 7 million-square-foot plant makes more than 1,500 vehicles daily for a total of more than 5 million cars made overall. It ...
Pre-1981 vehicles must be made by the original vehicle manufacturer and not modified by either professional tuners or individuals; Street-legal in its intended markets, having fulfilled the homologation tests or inspections required under either a) United States of America, b) European Union, or c) Japanese law to be granted this status