This Maserati MC20 Just Became the Fastest Autonomous Car
Maserati announced Monday that it set a new record for fastest autonomous car, or 197.7 mph in modified MC20, beating the old record by 4.9 mph. The record was set at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on one of the world's longest runways, the 2.8-mile stretch of pavement where Space Shuttles landed.
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The modified MC20 that drove autonomously—also with help from artificial intelligence—had previously set the mark for fastest autonomous production car at 177 mph, a record which it set in November. Maserati said that setting the mark was part of its journey to making autonomous driving safe for higher speeds on the highway. People and engineers involved with the project, part of the Indy Autonomous Challenge, probably also thought it was extremely cool to go fast.
'These world speed records are much more than just a showcase of future technology; we are pushing AI-driver software and robotics hardware to the absolute edge,' Paul Mitchell, CEO of Indy Autonomous Challenge, said in a statement. 'Doing so with a streetcar is helping transition the learnings of autonomous racing to enable safe, secure, sustainable, high-speed autonomous mobility on highways.'
The fastest car in the world is the Bugatti Chiron Super Sport which got up to a verified 304.7 mph, while the Koenigsegg Jesko Absolut will do a claimed 330 mph. Anything beyond that begins to enter the realm of jet engines or merely the impractical, which is why automakers focus these days more on acceleration. Acceleration is also getting much quicker thanks to electric motors and their instant torque, making numbers like a zero-to-60 time in 2 seconds or less seem almost normal.
With top speeds, though, very fast supercars usually top out around 200 mph, like the new Ferrari 12Cilindri Spider, which goes up to a claimed 211 mph. That's in part because while getting up to 200 mph is impressive, getting up to 300 mph is exponentially more difficult, and going faster than that exponentially more difficult still. There are also not that many suitable tracks or proving grounds on which to test super-fast speeds owing to the length required, which is why airport runways are often used. The autonomous record will surely fall again, in other words, but it wouldn't be much of a surprise if it ends up being mostly in line with the human-drive one.Best of Robb Report
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