Is The Race For 300mph The Last Frontier Of Road Car Pointlessness?
It was the 35th US President, John F Kennedy, who said: “We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things not because they are easy, but because they are hard”. A collective challenge against your rivals pulls you and your team together; pushes you on to new heights.
I get that. It’s a noble outlook, and it was the right one when it came to pushing the world out of the ridiculousness of the Cold War. But today, when it comes to making a production car that can hit 300mph, I really don’t see the point.
The likes of Koenigsegg, Hennessey and SSC are chasing the number anyway, so clearly it matters to someone. The benchmark is Koenigsegg’s Agera RS, which notched a two-way average of 277.87mph on a (closed) public road late last year, peaking at 284.55mph to take the crown for the fastest production car in the world.
Chasing this obsession with top speed back through history, you could argue that it’s been a matter of bragging rights ever since the world’s second car rolled out of the shed in which it was built. That the fastest car in the world is a thing is beyond any doubt. But to specifically target 300mph? Why? Isn’t 284mph enough, given that you already need an ultra-special set of circumstances to achieve it?
The amount of places worldwide where you could (even theoretically) achieve 300mph in a car wearing normal tyres numbers in the low single figures. For another thing, the number of tyres that are believed to be capable of the speed currently stands at… one. And even that one can’t officially achieve the speed yet.
In a The Drive report on the Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 rubber worn by the Agera RS for its world record speed runs in November, Michelin product manager Eric Schmedding said:
“We never intended these tires to go 270 mph. But while they’re rated for much lower speeds, we also know their true capabilities are much higher.”
Apparently the tyres were tested at an aircraft tyre-testing facility in North Carolina because the rigs could replicate much higher speeds. The Cup 2s passed the tests and gave the green light to Koenigsegg’s records, courtesy of an aramid fibre running through the tyre’s core construction that prevents it from expanding under the massive centrifugal force. Fine, then; 300mph shouldn’t be limited by a lack of tyres - or desire from niche manufacturers.
With three such dedicated teams on the case it’s guaranteed that someone will pass the magic number at some point. I’m sure we’ll all acknowledge it and give the first people to achieve it a hearty digital pat on the back. But when it comes down to it, whether a car can do 284mph or 300mph, or even 400mph, is all kind of irrelevant.
Boasts about top speed just feel so… outdated, to me. Far more important is how much raw enjoyment a car gives you. A top speed that you can never extract from a car you potentially paid millions for isn’t a whole lot of use. In the case of the Hennessey F5, it sounds like the customer cars won’t be capable of the magic figure anyway. Of course, my opinion is probably irrelevant because I probably couldn’t even afford one of the special Michelins, let alone the whole car.
When NASA finally landed on the Moon there was really no point in the Russians continuing to spend vast sums of money to achieve the same feat; they’d always have been second-best even if they’d spent longer on the surface or planted two flags instead of one.
The 300mph race will be the same. It’s the last round three-figure speed that will be physically possible by a road car on this planet, so when someone reaches it, everyone else will just be wasting their time and money on something that’s been done before. That doesn’t make it any easier to achieve, but the point – if there ever really was one – will be long gone.
Comments
While the Americans are looking at 300mph, I’m sat here wondering whether the Project One or Valkyrie will lap the Nurburgring in under 6 minutes.
While the Englishmen are saying “300mph is the last round three-figure speed that will be physically possible by a road car on this planet”, I’m sat here looking at 500kmh going “Wtf”
Engineering Explained already did a video on this though
The Hennessey is said to do 301 mph,so you got that wrong,and the Chiron,without the limiter,is said to do 288 mph
What if more highways become like the autobahn. The fact that the average top speed of modern cars is a lot higher than before makes transportation a whole lot faster
There doesn’t need to be a point
Since we’ve landed on the moon why bother with mars? The set of circumstances anyone could actually go to mars are slim. Space ship technology isnt good enough to survive that long in space.
We do this because its damn cool and has trickle down improvements to everyday technology and life. Embrace the race in futility because it just might improve your life!
Let the engineers have fun.
Since when have we become boring enough to look at something that says it can go 300+ and go “ah that’s a little pointless”
All that we like about cars is objectively pointless, loud exhausts, sporty handling, high power, manual gearboxes, none of those make actual sense. Still we love them, so once we start going on about how pointless things of the sort are, we’re heading in the wrong direction
CT is just saying this because a American car is basically guaranteed to break 300 mph. Stop being biased.
That is a completely ridiculous statement.
Aftet 300mph it will be 400mph