The world’s fastest EV, the Rimac Nevera, just got a little quicker. Rimac shared a series of acceleration figures after a visit to Germany’s Automotive Testing center in late April, painting a ...
Rimac is no stranger to ultra-quick EVs, but its latest model is on a different level entirely. The Rimac Nevera recently set 23 new performance records, including a new 0-400-0 kilometers-per-hour ...
The 2022 Rimac Nevera did not just nudge electric performance forward, it forced engineers to rewrite what road‑legal acceleration can look like. With power, traction control and aerodynamics all ...
Rimac has established itself as the performance kingpin of the EV world. Its 1,914-horsepower (1,426-kW), 2,655 lb-ft (3,600-Nm) Nevera hypercar holds the top speed record for production EVs at 258 ...
Back in 2023 the Rimac Nevera broke 23 performance records in one day, after it had already set the production electric vehicle top speed record. Basically all of those 23 records were about ...
In the time it takes you to read this sentence, the Nevera will have gone from a dead stop to 130 miles per hour. In January 2023, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson released an episode of his podcast ...
The Rimac Nevera is already the fastest EV in the world. Now it can claim to be the quickest, too, as Rimac has announced it just set a production-car record for 0-60. At Automotive Testing Papenburg ...
Only a few months after announcing a previous record-setting achievement, the Croatia-based automaker Rimac Automobili has hit another milestone with its EV hypercar, the Rimac Nevera. In a press ...
The Rimac Nevera has set nearly two dozen new performance records, including a 0-60 mph acceleration record for production cars, the company announced Wednesday. The all-electric Nevera achieved 0-60 ...
Getting from 0 to 400 km/h (249 mph) and back to a standstill as quickly as possible has become a hotly contested acceleration and braking benchmark for the world's fastest hypercars. It's not just a ...
Rimac Automobili CEO Mate Rimac has affirmed that, with certain engineering adjustments, a car can indeed accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in less than a second, backing Tesla CEO Elon Musk‘s promise of a ...
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