Advertisement

3000-HP Venturi Electric Car At Bonneville: Land Speed Record In One Class, Prior Title Still Stands (UPDATED)

With its new "Ludicrous" mode, the Tesla Model S P85D can do 0 to 60 mph in 2.8 seconds. But it's not the fastest electric car around, not by a long shot.

In 2010, the Venturi Buckeye Bullet 2.5 (VBB-2.5) streamliner set a land-speed record at the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, reaching more than 300 mph.

This year its creators--France's Venturi Automobiles and Ohio State University--are back for another go with an improved design.

SEE ALSO: At 307 MPH, Ohio-Built Electric Racer Is Anything But Slow (Aug 2010)

UPDATE: The article below was published on July 21, 2015. On August 27, Venturi sent out a statement noting that its new VBB-3 streamliner had achieved a new Land Speed Record (subject to official certification) for one-mile speed in an electric car.

ADVERTISEMENT

That record was 240.320 mph (386.757 kph).

Very wet conditions on the Bonneville Salt Flats caused the cancellation of Bonneville Speed Week, which was to have been held August 8-14. A heavy rainstorm on August 7 did significant damage to the surface, and the Venturi team couldn't even set up a temporary building until the week of August 15.

Testing didn't start until August 19, and wet, bumpy conditions in parts of its truncated 10-mile length produced vibrations and shaking in the VBB-3 that ultimately disrupted its electric system. The car's sole record run on August 21 was ended when when the front cooling tank was pierced on the return leg.

Roger Schroer, who drove the VBB-3, said, "In eleven years here I have never driven on such a difficult track. The car was sliding on the surface from one side to the other due to soft spots and bumps."

With the safety of its driver the primary concern, the Venturi team withdrew without having beaten its prior overall World Land Speed Record record this year.

Venturi Buckeye Bullet 3
Venturi Buckeye Bullet 3

The Venturi Buckeye Bullet 3 (VBB-3) boasts 3,000 horsepower, and the team wants to see it reach 600 kph (373 mph) this August.

Billed as the world's most powerful electric car, VBB-3 will have to exceed the land-speed record set by its predecessor five years ago.

The record currently stands at an average 307.6 mph, and was set by Ohio State University Transportation Research Center test driver Roger Schroer--who will pilot VBB-3 this year.

Official records use an average of runs in both directions. In 2010, Schroer actually hit a top speed of 320 mph in one direction.