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Tesla's Model S Plaid lives up to the hype in testing

Tesla's Model S Plaid lives up to the hype in testing



[Update: This article previously said that the Plaid fell short of Musk's claim of a 1.91 second 0-60. This was an error on your author's part; that figure was claimed for the forthcoming Tesla Roadster, not the Model S Plaid. The numbers have been updated and the related information corrected.]

Upon revealing the Model S Plaid to the world, Tesla CEO Elon Musk claimed that, among its other impressive specs, it is the only production car with a sub-2.0-second 0-60 time. That claim alone raised a lot of eyebrows, especially among those of us who evaluate cars for a living. Tesla's lack of cooperation with media outlets is fairly universal, and getting ahold of its products for evaluation is virtually impossible, but Motor Trend was able to negotiate some time behind the wheel of a Model S Plaid, and even got Tesla to agree to instrumented testing ... under certain conditions. Tesla's conditions.

Tesla insisted that MT's acceleration testing be done on surfaces prepped with VHT, also known as TrackBite or some variant of the term "traction compound." In short, it's the sticky resin used to treat drag strip boxes to improve launch grip. This is not how MT performs its normal testing, which sparked a whole new round of discussions. Here it is, straight from the source:

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"During planning, Tesla requested that we not use our normal facility. After much back and forth, we offered to secure use of an automotive proving ground where we conduct Of The Year testing. Tesla then told us we could accept its offer of hosting us at Famoso Raceway near Bakersfield, California, or we could forget the whole thing. We accepted."

Solid start, right? Well, it didn't play out that way. Tesla threw them a curveball at the last possible second:

"Then, at the track on test day, Tesla informed us it would require our driver to launch the car only on the VHT-prepped surface. But after further on-site negotiations and a backward pre-run by Tesla's own test driver, we came to an agreement: We could conduct runs in each direction, on both the Tesla-requested VHT and, per our normal procedure, on regular asphalt. As we were preparing to run our tests, the Plaid's handlers received a phone call, and suddenly our options were once again to launch only on the VHT-prepped surface — or leave."

"After our own internal discussions, we chose a third option: We agreed to Tesla's conditions at Famoso and made plans to head to our Fontana test track the following day to see how quick the Model S Plaid would be when tested under the same conditions we've used to safely and effectively evaluate everything from economy cars to the world's fastest hypercars."

As a quick recap, here's what Musk claimed the Plaid had going for it when it was revealed earlier this month: