Here is the definitive list of the top 5 Fastest Cars in the World! Truly Amazing pieces of engineering, pushing performance to its limits! Relish in the power of the SSC Ultimate Aero, Bugatti Veyron, Koenigsegg CCX, Saleen S7 Twin-Turbo & the Mclaren F1!
Rank 1. SSC Ultimate Aero
The SSC Aero is an American-built mid-engine sports car by Shelby Super Cars. Its
higher-performance limited production version, the SSC Ultimate Aero TT, is
currently the fastest production car in the world, with a fastest recorded
speed of 413 km/h (257 mph).This speed was reportedly achieved during
tests on September 13, 2007 in West Richland, Washington, United States and
verified by Guinness World Records on October 9, 2007.
The Aero and the Shelby Super Cars company are the brainchildren
of Jerod Shelby, who spent over seven years designing the car. The basic Aero
model is no longer produced, while, as of 2008, the Ultimate Aero costs about
620,000 dollars.
Rank 2. Bugatti
Veyron
The Bugatti
Veyron 16.4 is a mid-engine
sports car produced by
Volkswagen Group subsidiary Bugatti Automobiles SAS introduced in 2005. It is
currently the fastest accelerating and decelerating production car in the
world. It is currently also the most expensive production car available at a
price of 1.1 million Euro. It is able to achieve the second highest top speed
for a production car, behind the SSC Ultimate Aero TT
.
Powered by a 736-kilowatt (1,001 PS/987 hp) W16 engine, it is able to achieve an average
top speed of 408.47 km/h (253.81 mph). The car reached full
production in September 2005, and is handcrafted in a factory Volkswagen built
near the former Bugatti headquarters in Château St Jean in Molsheim (Alsace,
France). It is named after French racing driver Pierre Veyron, who won the 24 hours of Le
Mans in 1939 while racing
for the original Bugatti firm. Two examples of the Veyron are known to have
been wrecked since production began.
Rank 3. Koenigsegg
CCX
The Koenigsegg
CCX is a mid-engined roadster
from Swedish car manufacturer Koenigsegg. The CCX has been engineered to comply
with the US regulation and market demands and
is an evolutionary design that replaced the Koenigsegg CCR. CCX is an abbreviation for Competition Coupe X; the X
commemorating the 10th anniversary, (being the Roman numeral for ten), of the completion and test
drive of the first CC vehicle in 1996.
The CCX was first unveiled on February 28, 2006 at the 2006 Geneva
Motor Show although its existence was announced earlier. A derivative known as the
CCXR is available, the difference being that CCXR's engine is tuned to run on
biofuel. The different fuel and tune allows the CCXR to produce 25% more power
than the CCX.
Rank 4. Saleen
S7 Twin-Turbo
The Saleen
S7 is a limited production,
hand built high-performance automobile developed jointly by Saleen,
Hidden Creek Industries, Phil Frank Design, and Ray Mallock Ltd. with RML
taking full credit designing and developing the S7 and produced solely by
Saleen in Irvine, California. It is the first car produced by Saleen not based
on an existing design. The
S7 debuted on August 19, 2000 at the Monterey Historic Races. From 2000 until
2004, the S7 featured a naturally aspirated V8 engine with 550 horsepower.
In 2005, the S7 was replaced by the S7 Twin Turbo, which featured a more
powerful twin-turbo system that boosted engine power to 750 horsepower
(760 PS/559 kW) and the top speed to an estimated 250 mph
(402 km/h)
Rank 5. McLaren F1
The McLaren F1 was formerly the fastest street legal
production car in the world, holding this record from 1994 to 2005, the longest
period the record has been held by any street legal or production car in the
history of automobiles. It was engineered and produced by McLaren Automotive, a
subsidiary of the British McLaren Group that, among others, owns the McLaren
Mercedes Formula One team.
Today, it is still the fastest naturally aspirated car
in the world.
The McLaren F1 was at the time the fastest production car ever
built, eclipsing the Jaguar XJ220. A standard version of the McLaren achieved a
top speed of 371 km/h (231 mph) in 1994, holding this record for more
than 10 years until it was finally eclipsed in 2005 by the Koenigsegg CCR.
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