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Consumer Reports: The Tesla Model S P85D is so good it 'defies the laws of physics' (tsla)

Tesla Model S
Tesla Model S

Tesla

The Tesla Model S P85D performed well on Consumer Reports' road tests — so well that the 80-year-old publication is calling the Tesla the best car it has ever tested.

It generated a raw score of 103 on a scale that only goes up to 100.

The high-performance Tesla's incredible showing actually forced Consumer Reports to reset its scoring system with P85D as the new benchmark.

Actually, these shouldn't be all that surprising.

After all, the car the P85D bumped from the top spot is its own sibling — the single-engine Model S, which CR tested in 2013.

"Usually, when you review the base model and then the performance model, you get more performance but lose efficiency," Consumer Reports' auto editor Mark Rechtin told Business Insider in an interview. "That didn’t happen here. In fact, it got more efficient. The car defies the laws of physics."

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Armed with an 85-kilowatt-hour battery pack and Tesla's "Insane Mode" software, CR's P85D managed the sprint to 60 mph in just 3.5 seconds.

Although that time is nearly half a second slower than Tesla's claimed time, the P85D is still the quickest car the publication has ever experienced.

Rechtin compared the Tesla's 1.02 Gs of force on acceleration to that of jumping off a building.

At the same time, Consumer Reports found the dual-motor achieved the equivalent to 87 mpg in fuel economy with a range of more than 200 miles.

Surprisingly, this isn't the first time in recent memory that Consumer Reports has had to reconfigure its scoring system to account for the incredible results of a car. In 1996, the Porsche Boxster scored 100 on its road test. In 2013, the first Model S scored a mind-blowing raw score of 110/100.

As a result, Consumer Reports was forced to move the goal posts to accommodate the car — eventually settling on a score of 99/100. What this means is that the Tesla Model S is making it harder for future cars to generate high test scores at Consumer Reports.

Tesla Model S
Tesla Model S

Tesla

According to Rechtin, the Tesla's closest conventional rival in CR's road tests is the iconic Mercedes-Benz S-Class, which scored 95/100.

With that said, Rechtin was quick to point out that the P85D's high score doesn't mean it's the perfect car. In fact, the score only accounts for the Tesla's performance in the road test. This means that parameters such as acceleration, handling, braking, and interior fit and finish were taken into consideration while other factors, such as reliability, were excluded.