Article 6EPQ0 This student-built EV just set a new world record for 0–62 mph

This student-built EV just set a new world record for 0–62 mph

by
Jonathan M. Gitlin
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6EPQ0)
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Enlarge / You don't need 2,000 hp to set a world record for the fastest time to 62 mph. (credit: ETH Zurich / Alessandro Della Bella)

There's a new world record for the fastest 0 to 62 mph (0-100 km/h) for an electric vehicle, courtesy of a team of students at the Academic Motorsports Club Zurich and the Swiss universities ETH Zurich and Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts. The team did so with a scratch-built EV, designing everything from its chassis to its circuit boards, and bested the existing record-set last year by students in Stuttgart, Germany-by more than a third.

The near-instant torque of an electric motor means that even a relatively low-powered hatchback like the Mini Cooper SE or Chevrolet Bolt feels quick off the line. In the days before electric propulsion's recent renaissance, a 0-60 mph time in the three-second range was the stuff of unobtainium. Now, you can buy a Tesla Model 3 that will hit 60 in 3.5 seconds for less than $50,000.

As the price point goes up, the 0-60 time comes down. Anything starting with a 2.x is quick enough that it overcomes even the most jaded road tester in a way that taking 1 second longer to get there doesn't. Tesla will sell you a Model S that will get you there that quick, and Porsche's Taycan Turbo S is designed to do hard launches all day long until the battery is drained.

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