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Zhao becomes first Chinese world champ

Zhao becomes first Chinese world champ

Zhao Xintong defeated Mark Williams 18-12 in the final to become the first Chinese player to win the Snooker World Championship.

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Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real
Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real

Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi has returned to Germany's infamous Nürburgring circuit with a four-door lap record in mind, and this time it has managed to topple the Porsche Taycan at the top of the timing sheets. Once again taking its SU7 Ultra performance sedan to the 20.8km Nordschleife public road course, Xaomi has claimed the lap record for road-legal four-door cars with a blistering time of seven minutes and 4.957 seconds – clear of the 7:7.55 time set by the Taycan Turbo GT in early 2024. Not only that, it also outdid the Rimac Nevera electric hypercar by just 0.3 seconds to claim the lap record for production electric vehicles (EVs), and came within a whisker of the combustion-powered Porsche 911 GT3, Mercedes-AMG GT R Pro, and Porsche Cayman GT4 RS. Unlike Xiaomi's previous lap in 2024, which used a track-only SU7 Ultra prototype, this lap will stand as an official time as the vehicle used was completely road-legal. The only modification was an optional track package, much like the Weissach Package fitted to the now-defeated Taycan. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Still, the production SU7 Ultra was only around 18 seconds slower than its prototype counterpart, which was built to be a track weapon with the support of British engineering firm and motorsport powerhouse Prodrive. Fitted to the prototype version was a carbon-fibre body, stripped-back interior, slick tyres, and extravagant aerodynamic and cooling aids. The production version still features advanced aerodynamics, but sports a smaller front splitter, altered bonnet, less aggressive rear wing, and even an active rear diffuser that continuously tilts for added downforce. Xiaomi has claimed the 2360kg Ultra produces 285kg of downforce at its 350km/h top speed, whereas the prototype version produced as much as 2145kg and weighed slightly less than 1900kg. The production SU7 Ultra hit a top speed of 346km/h during its lap of the Nordschleife. Powering the SU7 Ultra is an all-wheel drive tri-motor drivetrain comprising one Xiaomi HyperEngine V6s motor at the front and two HyperEngine V8s motors at the rear. Total outputs are quoted at 1138kW of power and 1770Nm of torque, which is claimed to send the car from 0-100km/h in just 1.98 seconds, and to 200km/h in 5.96 seconds. It's fitted with Pirelli P Zero 5 tyres as standard, and features air suspension, a chassis-integrated roll cage, and carbon ceramic brakes. This powertrain was shared with the prototype model and is fed by a CATL 93.7kWh NMC battery. Claimed driving range on the generous CLTC test cycle is 620km, down from 830km for the standard rear-wheel drive SU7 variant. In China, the production SU7 Ultra is on sale for 814,900 Yuan (A$174,000). For reference, Australian examples of the Taycan Turbo GT with the Weissach Package are priced from $416,000 before on-road costs. MORE: Chinese EV blitzes Rimac Nevera's Nürburgring time, but doesn't set a new recordMORE: Chinese smartphone giant's Taycan GT rival due to launch in 2025MORE: Porsche topples Tesla with Nurburgring electric car lap timeMORE: Rimac Nevera electric hypercar sets new Nurburgring record Content originally sourced from: Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi has returned to Germany's infamous Nürburgring circuit with a four-door lap record in mind, and this time it has managed to topple the Porsche Taycan at the top of the timing sheets. Once again taking its SU7 Ultra performance sedan to the 20.8km Nordschleife public road course, Xaomi has claimed the lap record for road-legal four-door cars with a blistering time of seven minutes and 4.957 seconds – clear of the 7:7.55 time set by the Taycan Turbo GT in early 2024. Not only that, it also outdid the Rimac Nevera electric hypercar by just 0.3 seconds to claim the lap record for production electric vehicles (EVs), and came within a whisker of the combustion-powered Porsche 911 GT3, Mercedes-AMG GT R Pro, and Porsche Cayman GT4 RS. Unlike Xiaomi's previous lap in 2024, which used a track-only SU7 Ultra prototype, this lap will stand as an official time as the vehicle used was completely road-legal. The only modification was an optional track package, much like the Weissach Package fitted to the now-defeated Taycan. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Still, the production SU7 Ultra was only around 18 seconds slower than its prototype counterpart, which was built to be a track weapon with the support of British engineering firm and motorsport powerhouse Prodrive. Fitted to the prototype version was a carbon-fibre body, stripped-back interior, slick tyres, and extravagant aerodynamic and cooling aids. The production version still features advanced aerodynamics, but sports a smaller front splitter, altered bonnet, less aggressive rear wing, and even an active rear diffuser that continuously tilts for added downforce. Xiaomi has claimed the 2360kg Ultra produces 285kg of downforce at its 350km/h top speed, whereas the prototype version produced as much as 2145kg and weighed slightly less than 1900kg. The production SU7 Ultra hit a top speed of 346km/h during its lap of the Nordschleife. Powering the SU7 Ultra is an all-wheel drive tri-motor drivetrain comprising one Xiaomi HyperEngine V6s motor at the front and two HyperEngine V8s motors at the rear. Total outputs are quoted at 1138kW of power and 1770Nm of torque, which is claimed to send the car from 0-100km/h in just 1.98 seconds, and to 200km/h in 5.96 seconds. It's fitted with Pirelli P Zero 5 tyres as standard, and features air suspension, a chassis-integrated roll cage, and carbon ceramic brakes. This powertrain was shared with the prototype model and is fed by a CATL 93.7kWh NMC battery. Claimed driving range on the generous CLTC test cycle is 620km, down from 830km for the standard rear-wheel drive SU7 variant. In China, the production SU7 Ultra is on sale for 814,900 Yuan (A$174,000). For reference, Australian examples of the Taycan Turbo GT with the Weissach Package are priced from $416,000 before on-road costs. MORE: Chinese EV blitzes Rimac Nevera's Nürburgring time, but doesn't set a new recordMORE: Chinese smartphone giant's Taycan GT rival due to launch in 2025MORE: Porsche topples Tesla with Nurburgring electric car lap timeMORE: Rimac Nevera electric hypercar sets new Nurburgring record Content originally sourced from: Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi has returned to Germany's infamous Nürburgring circuit with a four-door lap record in mind, and this time it has managed to topple the Porsche Taycan at the top of the timing sheets. Once again taking its SU7 Ultra performance sedan to the 20.8km Nordschleife public road course, Xaomi has claimed the lap record for road-legal four-door cars with a blistering time of seven minutes and 4.957 seconds – clear of the 7:7.55 time set by the Taycan Turbo GT in early 2024. Not only that, it also outdid the Rimac Nevera electric hypercar by just 0.3 seconds to claim the lap record for production electric vehicles (EVs), and came within a whisker of the combustion-powered Porsche 911 GT3, Mercedes-AMG GT R Pro, and Porsche Cayman GT4 RS. Unlike Xiaomi's previous lap in 2024, which used a track-only SU7 Ultra prototype, this lap will stand as an official time as the vehicle used was completely road-legal. The only modification was an optional track package, much like the Weissach Package fitted to the now-defeated Taycan. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Still, the production SU7 Ultra was only around 18 seconds slower than its prototype counterpart, which was built to be a track weapon with the support of British engineering firm and motorsport powerhouse Prodrive. Fitted to the prototype version was a carbon-fibre body, stripped-back interior, slick tyres, and extravagant aerodynamic and cooling aids. The production version still features advanced aerodynamics, but sports a smaller front splitter, altered bonnet, less aggressive rear wing, and even an active rear diffuser that continuously tilts for added downforce. Xiaomi has claimed the 2360kg Ultra produces 285kg of downforce at its 350km/h top speed, whereas the prototype version produced as much as 2145kg and weighed slightly less than 1900kg. The production SU7 Ultra hit a top speed of 346km/h during its lap of the Nordschleife. Powering the SU7 Ultra is an all-wheel drive tri-motor drivetrain comprising one Xiaomi HyperEngine V6s motor at the front and two HyperEngine V8s motors at the rear. Total outputs are quoted at 1138kW of power and 1770Nm of torque, which is claimed to send the car from 0-100km/h in just 1.98 seconds, and to 200km/h in 5.96 seconds. It's fitted with Pirelli P Zero 5 tyres as standard, and features air suspension, a chassis-integrated roll cage, and carbon ceramic brakes. This powertrain was shared with the prototype model and is fed by a CATL 93.7kWh NMC battery. Claimed driving range on the generous CLTC test cycle is 620km, down from 830km for the standard rear-wheel drive SU7 variant. In China, the production SU7 Ultra is on sale for 814,900 Yuan (A$174,000). For reference, Australian examples of the Taycan Turbo GT with the Weissach Package are priced from $416,000 before on-road costs. MORE: Chinese EV blitzes Rimac Nevera's Nürburgring time, but doesn't set a new recordMORE: Chinese smartphone giant's Taycan GT rival due to launch in 2025MORE: Porsche topples Tesla with Nurburgring electric car lap timeMORE: Rimac Nevera electric hypercar sets new Nurburgring record Content originally sourced from: Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi has returned to Germany's infamous Nürburgring circuit with a four-door lap record in mind, and this time it has managed to topple the Porsche Taycan at the top of the timing sheets. Once again taking its SU7 Ultra performance sedan to the 20.8km Nordschleife public road course, Xaomi has claimed the lap record for road-legal four-door cars with a blistering time of seven minutes and 4.957 seconds – clear of the 7:7.55 time set by the Taycan Turbo GT in early 2024. Not only that, it also outdid the Rimac Nevera electric hypercar by just 0.3 seconds to claim the lap record for production electric vehicles (EVs), and came within a whisker of the combustion-powered Porsche 911 GT3, Mercedes-AMG GT R Pro, and Porsche Cayman GT4 RS. Unlike Xiaomi's previous lap in 2024, which used a track-only SU7 Ultra prototype, this lap will stand as an official time as the vehicle used was completely road-legal. The only modification was an optional track package, much like the Weissach Package fitted to the now-defeated Taycan. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Still, the production SU7 Ultra was only around 18 seconds slower than its prototype counterpart, which was built to be a track weapon with the support of British engineering firm and motorsport powerhouse Prodrive. Fitted to the prototype version was a carbon-fibre body, stripped-back interior, slick tyres, and extravagant aerodynamic and cooling aids. The production version still features advanced aerodynamics, but sports a smaller front splitter, altered bonnet, less aggressive rear wing, and even an active rear diffuser that continuously tilts for added downforce. Xiaomi has claimed the 2360kg Ultra produces 285kg of downforce at its 350km/h top speed, whereas the prototype version produced as much as 2145kg and weighed slightly less than 1900kg. The production SU7 Ultra hit a top speed of 346km/h during its lap of the Nordschleife. Powering the SU7 Ultra is an all-wheel drive tri-motor drivetrain comprising one Xiaomi HyperEngine V6s motor at the front and two HyperEngine V8s motors at the rear. Total outputs are quoted at 1138kW of power and 1770Nm of torque, which is claimed to send the car from 0-100km/h in just 1.98 seconds, and to 200km/h in 5.96 seconds. It's fitted with Pirelli P Zero 5 tyres as standard, and features air suspension, a chassis-integrated roll cage, and carbon ceramic brakes. This powertrain was shared with the prototype model and is fed by a CATL 93.7kWh NMC battery. Claimed driving range on the generous CLTC test cycle is 620km, down from 830km for the standard rear-wheel drive SU7 variant. In China, the production SU7 Ultra is on sale for 814,900 Yuan (A$174,000). For reference, Australian examples of the Taycan Turbo GT with the Weissach Package are priced from $416,000 before on-road costs. MORE: Chinese EV blitzes Rimac Nevera's Nürburgring time, but doesn't set a new recordMORE: Chinese smartphone giant's Taycan GT rival due to launch in 2025MORE: Porsche topples Tesla with Nurburgring electric car lap timeMORE: Rimac Nevera electric hypercar sets new Nurburgring record Content originally sourced from:

Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real
Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real

Perth Now

time4 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real

Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi has returned to Germany's infamous Nürburgring circuit with a four-door lap record in mind, and this time it has managed to topple the Porsche Taycan at the top of the timing sheets. Once again taking its SU7 Ultra performance sedan to the 20.8km Nordschleife public road course, Xaomi has claimed the lap record for road-legal four-door cars with a blistering time of seven minutes and 4.957 seconds – clear of the 7:7.55 time set by the Taycan Turbo GT in early 2024. Not only that, it also outdid the Rimac Nevera electric hypercar by just 0.3 seconds to claim the lap record for production electric vehicles (EVs), and came within a whisker of the combustion-powered Porsche 911 GT3, Mercedes-AMG GT R Pro, and Porsche Cayman GT4 RS. Unlike Xiaomi's previous lap in 2024, which used a track-only SU7 Ultra prototype, this lap will stand as an official time as the vehicle used was completely road-legal. The only modification was an optional track package, much like the Weissach Package fitted to the now-defeated Taycan. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Still, the production SU7 Ultra was only around 18 seconds slower than its prototype counterpart, which was built to be a track weapon with the support of British engineering firm and motorsport powerhouse Prodrive. Fitted to the prototype version was a carbon-fibre body, stripped-back interior, slick tyres, and extravagant aerodynamic and cooling aids. The production version still features advanced aerodynamics, but sports a smaller front splitter, altered bonnet, less aggressive rear wing, and even an active rear diffuser that continuously tilts for added downforce. Xiaomi has claimed the 2360kg Ultra produces 285kg of downforce at its 350km/h top speed, whereas the prototype version produced as much as 2145kg and weighed slightly less than 1900kg. The production SU7 Ultra hit a top speed of 346km/h during its lap of the Nordschleife. Supplied Credit: CarExpert Supplied Credit: CarExpert Powering the SU7 Ultra is an all-wheel drive tri-motor drivetrain comprising one Xiaomi HyperEngine V6s motor at the front and two HyperEngine V8s motors at the rear. Total outputs are quoted at 1138kW of power and 1770Nm of torque, which is claimed to send the car from 0-100km/h in just 1.98 seconds, and to 200km/h in 5.96 seconds. It's fitted with Pirelli P Zero 5 tyres as standard, and features air suspension, a chassis-integrated roll cage, and carbon ceramic brakes. This powertrain was shared with the prototype model and is fed by a CATL 93.7kWh NMC battery. Claimed driving range on the generous CLTC test cycle is 620km, down from 830km for the standard rear-wheel drive SU7 variant. In China, the production SU7 Ultra is on sale for 814,900 Yuan (A$174,000). For reference, Australian examples of the Taycan Turbo GT with the Weissach Package are priced from $416,000 before on-road costs. MORE: Chinese EV blitzes Rimac Nevera's Nürburgring time, but doesn't set a new recordMORE: Chinese smartphone giant's Taycan GT rival due to launch in 2025MORE: Porsche topples Tesla with Nurburgring electric car lap timeMORE: Rimac Nevera electric hypercar sets new Nurburgring record

Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real
Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real

7NEWS

time4 hours ago

  • 7NEWS

Xiaomi SU7 smashes Nürburgring EV lap record – this time for real

Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi has returned to Germany's infamous Nürburgring circuit with a four-door lap record in mind, and this time it has managed to topple the Porsche Taycan at the top of the timing sheets. Once again taking its SU7 Ultra performance sedan to the 20.8km Nordschleife public road course, Xaomi has claimed the lap record for road-legal four-door cars with a blistering time of seven minutes and 4.957 seconds – clear of the 7:7.55 time set by the Taycan Turbo GT in early 2024. Not only that, it also outdid the Rimac Nevera electric hypercar by just 0.3 seconds to claim the lap record for production electric vehicles (EVs), and came within a whisker of the combustion-powered Porsche 911 GT3, Mercedes-AMG GT R Pro, and Porsche Cayman GT4 RS. Unlike Xiaomi's previous lap in 2024, which used a track-only SU7 Ultra prototype, this lap will stand as an official time as the vehicle used was completely road-legal. The only modification was an optional track package, much like the Weissach Package fitted to the now-defeated Taycan. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Still, the production SU7 Ultra was only around 18 seconds slower than its prototype counterpart, which was built to be a track weapon with the support of British engineering firm and motorsport powerhouse Prodrive. Fitted to the prototype version was a carbon-fibre body, stripped-back interior, slick tyres, and extravagant aerodynamic and cooling aids. The production version still features advanced aerodynamics, but sports a smaller front splitter, altered bonnet, less aggressive rear wing, and even an active rear diffuser that continuously tilts for added downforce. Xiaomi has claimed the 2360kg Ultra produces 285kg of downforce at its 350km/h top speed, whereas the prototype version produced as much as 2145kg and weighed slightly less than 1900kg. The production SU7 Ultra hit a top speed of 346km/h during its lap of the Nordschleife. Powering the SU7 Ultra is an all-wheel drive tri-motor drivetrain comprising one Xiaomi HyperEngine V6s motor at the front and two HyperEngine V8s motors at the rear. Total outputs are quoted at 1138kW of power and 1770Nm of torque, which is claimed to send the car from 0-100km/h in just 1.98 seconds, and to 200km/h in 5.96 seconds. It's fitted with Pirelli P Zero 5 tyres as standard, and features air suspension, a chassis-integrated roll cage, and carbon ceramic brakes. This powertrain was shared with the prototype model and is fed by a CATL 93.7kWh NMC battery. Claimed driving range on the generous CLTC test cycle is 620km, down from 830km for the standard rear-wheel drive SU7 variant. In China, the production SU7 Ultra is on sale for 814,900 Yuan (A$174,000). For reference, Australian examples of the Taycan Turbo GT with the Weissach Package are priced from $416,000 before on-road costs.

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