TopspeedPT
Track Technician
- Messages
- 3,751
Even with almost infinite money I wouldn't even be considering it. It's a one trick pony, and an unattractive one at that. At this level the performance is irrelevant, it's just for bragging rights, so if it's not appealing for any other reason, why waste the money?
I'd be sh!t scared attempting 200 mph. 300 mph? Wouldn't dream of it. That's a speed beyond imagining and the outcomes for the smallest mistake are dire to say the least.
Ok. Can someone tell me, why the Tuatara accomplishes this on standard off-the-shelf Michelin PSC2 ... while the Bugattis need special tires, which cost you an arm and a leg? Just because the weight?
For me the legend status of Bugatti is crumbling a bit ... after the PP video, where they had a 2007 Veyron with just few kilometers on the odo, which was far from the claimed 1001hp ... now a garage company takes the record with a car on standard tires, which looks even much nicer to me.
Never was a fan of ugly Veyron/Chiron design.
A prominent YouTuber's conspiratorial Reddit thread earlier this week cast doubts on the run's validity, based on an analysis of certain aspects of the published video—counting the elapsed time between a few points, comparing it to the Agera RS's run over the same stretch of road, and noting that the speedometer doesn't seem to match the overlaid data. But what this video doesn't rely on is the actual telemetry—it's an analysis of a video. SSC isn't using the published video to validate its claims with Guinness World Records.
That brings us to today's news. Dewetron, a GPS data analysis company with a fair bit of experience in validating top speed record runs, has gone over the SSC Tuatara's data and claims its 316.11-mph record run is indeed valid. The company says its equipment has been used to confirm four out of the five previous record runs before the Tuatara's, including for the Ultimate Aero. We haven't independently verified the data, but this is a company with skin in the game, and professionals whose reputations are on the line. It'll take more than a bit of YouTube sleuthing to second-guess their GPS data—and, we should mention, GPS systems are more than accurate enough to precisely verify the speeds of this run. And then, of course, Guinness World Records will examine the data and perhaps certify it as a valid world record.
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