Record Breakers: 7 Vehicular Wonders of the World
World’s Most Expensive Car: Bugatti Veyron
At a price tag of $2.4 million, the Bugatti Veyron SuperSport is the world’s most expensive car – and accordingly, only thirty of them have been produced. The Veyron SuperSport is powered with an 8-liter, W16 quad-turbocharged engine for a total of 1200 horsepower, and it’s made of lightweight materials like carbon fiber and aluminum. The Veyron 16.4 is the last version of this particular model that will ever be made. Is it worth the money? Sure, if achieving insane speeds of up to 267.81mph is important to you; no other car available to the general public and legal on the streets can go this fast.
The Bugatti Veyron held the title of the world’s fastest car for a while, until it was revealed that a speed limiter was switched off during tests. The title was stripped, and no other has been awarded. However, even nearly 270mph doesn’t reach the speeds that the actual world’s fastest car can achieve.
World’s Fastest Land Speed Car: Speed Demon Streamliner
This car definitely won’t be appearing on the highways anytime soon; it’s a one-off produced by George Poteet and Ron Main in an attempt to smash speed records, and that it did. The Speed Demon is the world’s fastest wheel-driven, piston-powered car, and it clocked an astonishing 439.562mph in a test at the 2012 Bonneville Speed Week. The shell is part of what makes the steam-powered Speed Demon so fast; it’s incredibly aerodynamic. The car boasts a Kenny Duttwiler 368-cubic-inch twin-turbo V8 engine.
World’s Largest Pick-Up Truck: Modified 1950s Dodge Power Wagon
Said to be the largest car or truck in the world, this 1950s Dodge Power Wagon was made by oil billionaire Seikh Hamad bin Hamdan Al Nahyan of the United Arab Emirates in the mid 1990s. Looking to be at least five times as large as a standard Dodge Power Wagon, this model is more than just a cab on wheels – it holds four air conditioned bedrooms, a living room and a bathroom, with a motorized tailgate that drops down to become a terrace.
Hamad is a bit of an eccentric, obsessed with collecting oversized vehicles; he also has a giant replica of the Willys WWII Jeep and two jeeps welded together into a double-wide vehicle. He also holds a number of Guinness World Records for things like the biggest graffiti tag on the planet.
World’s Most Fuel-Efficient Vehicle: VW XL1
The world’s most fuel-efficient car will achieve 261 miles per gallon – beat that with your Prius. The XL1 is a two-seat diesel plug-in hybrid with a driving range of a little over 30 miles; the limited range is part of what makes it such a miserly gas sipper. Small, low to the ground and aerodynamic, the XL1 was built for fuel efficiency, if not for speed; it will take 12.7 seconds for the car to get from zero to 62 miles per hour. The car’s narrow profile means the passenger seat has to be set back slightly from the driver’s seat so each person in the car has a little bit of elbow room. It’s intended to be a production car, but VW says it plans to use “handcrafting-like production methods” to build it at its facility in Germany.
World’s Most Narrow Car: Commuter Cars Tango
The Tango fits in just half a lane, so that two of these commuter cars can fit where only one standard car can. Ideal for people who commute to work alone, taking up a significant amount of road space with three to four empty seats in their vehicles, the Tango could potentially increase freeway lane capacity from 2,000 to 4,400 cars per hour. Just three feet wide, this ultra-narrow vehicle has superior maneuverability skills; Consumer Reports confirmed that it’s got the fastest time recorded through the emergency lane change maneuver. It’s 8’6″ long, less than the width of a truck, so it can be parked perpendicular to the curb.
World’s Toughest Vehicle: Paramount Maurader
Like a roided-up version of a Hummer, the Paramount Marauder is a consumer incarnation of a vehicle meant for military purposes, and it can take a serious beating. Made by Africa’s largest privately-held defense and aerospace company, the Marauder is typically used by the military, police and special forces. The company says “it has a deliberately non-aggressive appearance – making it perfect for police, peacekeepers and special forces operating in sensitive environments.” That’s probably less true with the versions that come equipped with weaponry fixed to the roof.
The 15-ton Marauder can withstand mine blasts, survive 7kg of plastic explosives, stand up to heavy gunfire and drive through buildings (watch it smash an H3 Hummer in the video above.) It’s twenty feet long, eight feet wide and nine feet tall. Though its top speed is just 70 miles per gallon, speed probably isn’t the most important feature of a vehicle like this. The civilian version costs a whopping $650,000, downright affordable compared to the Bugatti Veyron.
World’s Longest Limousine
The longest car in the world is a custom-built limousine stretching 100 feet (30.48 meters), with two driver’s cabins and 26 wheels. That’s right, two specially trained drivers are required to maneuver this thing on the road, and it’s not exactly street legal – it’s mostly used just for special events. Inside you’ll find a heated Jacuzzi, swimming pool, king-sized bed and a sun deck. It’s even got a helipad on the back.