This supercar is currently the quickest automobile in the world when it comes to backward driving, according to Guinness World Records.
Back in the last part of the 1960s, the quickest vehicle discounted on the planet was the wonderful Lamborghini Muira, offering a guaranteed maximum velocity of around 170 mph from its mid-mounted V-12. It’s been named by quite a few people throughout the long term, properly thus, as the world’s most memorable genuine supercar. Quick forward to the present time, and the Rimac Nevera assumes a comparable part in this day and age, offering apparently unrivaled degrees of execution in an arising however encouraging games vehicle market of new super-EVs. But, in that time hop from Muira to Nevera, innovation has created so that our legends of the past are simply passed on to act as joke for the accomplishments of today, as the Nevera has quite recently obliterated the Muira’s speed record with negligible changes by just driving in an orderly fashion in reverse.
Rimac’s Record Of Records
Rimac loves to establish standards. Last year, the all-electric Rimac Nevera roadster was named the world’s quickest creation EV in the wake of hitting a maximum velocity of 256 mph (the standard Nevera is “restricted” to a creation spec maximum velocity of 219 mph, yet Rimac will open the vehicle for clients in the right conditions). This year, Rimac has been occupied further laying out the Nevera’s record of predominance. The EV sports vehicle set a rankling record 7:05.298 Nürburgring track lap time (beating Tesla’s past record exertion by a whole 20 seconds), set another standard for the planned Supercar Shootout during the Goodwood Celebration of Speed, and proceeded to establish 23 different standards in a solitary day that are beyond any reasonable amount to specify again here yet that incorporates the fastest ever 0-249 mph time.
The only Nevera record that has been surpassed by a rival is the claimed quarter-mile time: the Pininfarina Battista EV supercar set a new record earlier this year, clocking in at 8.55 seconds, which is nearly too close to call given the disparate testing circumstances (and both cars happen to share extremely similar hardware).
Rimac Nevera EV Establishes Switch Standard
On October 7, 2023, Croatian driver Goran Drndak steered a Rimac Nevera in its natural Time Assault Release uniform (that was accessible on a restricted run of 12 creation units to celebrate earlier set standards) to a record switch maximum velocity of 171.34 mph at the very Auto Testing Papenburg office in Germany that facilitated Rimac’s other record tests, with a Guinness delegate close by to approve the outcomes. Motivation for the record came right off the bat in vehicle advancement, with reproductions showing the vehicle might actually accomplish speeds north of 150 mph in switch, yet the group didn’t know how the vehicle would deal with the optimal design.
This is the very thing driver Drndak experienced from a tough situation: ” On the actual run, it most certainly took some becoming acclimated to. You’re confronting straight out in reverse watching the landscape streak away from you quicker and quicker, feeling your neck pulled advances in practically a similar sensation you would regularly get under weighty slowing down. You’re moving the directing wheel so tenderly, cautious not to disturb the equilibrium, looking for your course and your slowing down bring up the back view reflect, meanwhile watching out for the speed. Notwithstanding it being totally unnatural to way the vehicle was designed, Nevera floated through one more record.” Searching for a slowing down point in a back view reflect at 170-mph speeds seems like a tomfoolery new test to attempt sometime in the not so distant future.