Fastest cars in world.
1. Bugatti Chiron Super Sport 300+: 304 mph
In August 2019, Bugatti topped the formerly reigning Hennessey Venom F5. Not only that, but the Chiron Super Sport 300+ also became the first car to break 300 miles per hour on the track. The final record was 304.773 mph with racing driver Andy Wallace at the wheel on Volkswagen’s Ehra-Lessien test track in Germany. If 300+ mph seems hard to comprehend, you don’t lack imagination. Covering 450 feet in a single second is mind-bending stuff.
Bugatti holds the crown for now, but the manufacturer may bow out of the race. “We have shown several times that we build the fastest cars in the world. In [the] future we will focus on other areas,” the manufacturer said in a statement. Only 30 of this quad-turbo, 8-liter, 16-cylinder engines will be produced at a cool $3.9M apiece.
2. Hennessey Venom F5: 301 mph
Hennessey Performance Engineering previously owned the top spot of this list with its Venom F5. The successor to the record-setting Venom GT, the F5 has a theoretical and claimed top speed of 301 mph, besting the next fastest car by a solid margin. Too bad Bugatti had to meddle in the top-speed wars again.
The Venom F5 utilizes a carbon fiber chassis and is powered by a 7.4-liter twin-turbocharged V8 good for 1,600 horsepower. While Hennessey has yet to legitimize its claims, the F5 will reportedly dash from 0 to 249 mph and back to 0 in less than 30 seconds. That’s about how long it takes a mild sports car just to get from 0 to 100 mph.
3. SSC Tuatara: 283 mph
On October 10, 2020, SSC claimed that its monstrous Tuatara averaged a top speed of 316.11 mph on its way to set a new record for the fastest production car in the world. Things went downhill for SSC after the run. The speed record came under scrutiny because people spotted inaccuracies with SSC’s videos. It wasn’t until July 2021 that SSC officially stated that the Tuatara hadn’t hit 316 mph. In an Instagram post, SSC admitted that the supercar didn’t even hit 301 mph.
Because of all of the hoopla, SSC headed to Johnny Bohmer Proving Ground in Florida to attempt another run. There, the Tuatara average 282.9 mph on two runs. That’s nowhere near the 316 mph SSC promised, but it is an actual run without any funny business.
SSC isn’t done chasing the speed record with the Tuatara, so we could see the supercar break the 300-mph mark in the future.
4. Koenigsegg Agera RS: 278 mph
If you’re only interested in proven claims, then the world’s fastest cars list skips Hennessey and SSC and picks back up with the Koenigsegg Agera RS. Until Bugatti’s Chiron Super Sport 300+ had blown through the 300 mph barrier, Koenigsegg and its Agera RS wore the proven VMAX crown with an average top speed of 278 mph. How did the Swedish automaker earn its stripes?
On November 4, 2017, the Nevada Department of Transportation closed an 11-mile stretch of road just outside Las Vegas. Koenigsegg turned up with a customer-owned Agera RS and Koenigsegg factory driver Niklas Lilja put down two high-speed runs (in opposing directions). The average pace (including one run at 285 mph) was recorded by the Guinness Book of World Records.
5. Hennessey Venom GT: 270 mph
When Koenigsegg set a new official top-speed record, Hennessey forfeited the title. The Hennessey Venom GT came out of nowhere to topple the mighty Bugatti Veyron. In 2014, Hennessey revealed a Lotus-based Frankenstein supercar with a 7.0-liter twin-turbo V8 and 1,244 horsepower. Until that moment, the Texas-based tuner had merely modified performance cars, but this was the company’s first stand-alone build.
With approval from the Kennedy Space Center, Hennessey recorded a top speed of 270.4 mph. Though the Guinness Book of World Records approved the run, it has received a fair bit of criticism. For one, most top-speed records are taken from an average of two runs in opposite directions (like Koenigsegg did with the Agera RS). Also, the Venom GT is a hand-built, low-production vehicle. Some have questioned whether it deserves to be counted among series production cars.
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